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You are here: Home / Archives for editorial

editorial

Ovzon participates in major initiative on future mobile communication solutions

January 7, 2025 by editorial

Ovzon, together with a range of other leading companies, authorities, and organizations, will participate in a major initiative focusing on mobile communication solutions expected to be in use during the 2030s.

The Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research (SSF) is investing 60 MSEK in the project SMART 6GSAT (Sustainable Mobile Autonomous and Resilient 6G SatCom), with KTH as the coordinator and project leader.

The aim is to integrate traditional land-based mobile communication with satellite communication in 6G. The vision is for mobile communication services to be seamlessly accessible to anyone with a 6G device, anywhere and anytime.

In addition to Ovzon, the industry consortium includes companies such as Ericsson, Saab, Swedish Space Corporation (SSC), Eutelsat-OneWeb, Airbus, and Viasat, as well as authorities such as the Swedish Post and Telecom Authority (PTS) and the European Incoherent Scatter Scientific Association (EISCAT).

Filed Under: News

Peter Krauss leading Terran Orbital to drive the firm’s new era of innovation and growth

January 2, 2025 by editorial

(12/23/24) As Terran Orbital looks ahead to 2025, the company’s new Chief Executive Officer—Peter Krauss—is focused on leveraging the company’s proven track record to drive innovation, enhancing its portfolio and fostering a culture of transparency and collaboration.

Mr. Krauss, formerly Terran Orbital’s Chief Operations Officer, successfully led the company’s business operations, significantly strengthened its operational framework, and set the company on a path of improved processes and operational efficiencies.

Since assuming the role of CEO in October, Krauss is no stranger to managing complex organizations. He has overseen merger and acquisition activities, global manufacturing, and distribution networks across European, American, and other markets.

His focus now lies on creating a new era for Terran Orbital, and doing so by leaning into the following key priorities:

  • Advancing Innovation: Positioning Terran Orbital at the forefront of space technology will continue building on the company’s expertise in satellite manufacturing and aerospace solutions.
  • Expanding Capacity: Scaling its manufacturing operations to meet growing market demand for small satellites, with a commitment to operational excellence.
  • Fostering Growth and Collaboration: Cultivating a team-driven culture where transparency and collaboration are central to success.

Beyond his professional accomplishments, Krauss has a passion for racing and performance cars. He spends his weekends on the race track, trying to beat his best time – something that spills over into his professional world and inspires him to continue delivering competitive solutions in the tech industry.

With Krauss at the helm, Terran Orbital is well-positioned to enhance its impact in the aerospace and defense sectors, championing new technology and expanding its market presence.

“I am deeply honored to step into the CEO role at Terran Orbital,” Krauss said. “Our talented team is the cornerstone of our success. Together, we will continue to drive innovation, strengthen our strategic initiatives, and build a collaborative culture focused on the missions of our customers and achieving new milestones for the company.”

Filed Under: News

Millennium Space Systems names their CEO

January 2, 2025 by editorial

Tony Gingiss has been named as the chief executive officer of Millennium Space Systems, a Boeing Company[NYSE: BA]. He has more than 30 years of experience in executive leadership, operations, design and production, across commercial, civil, defense and national security space. He previously held pivotal roles with Terran Orbital, Virgin Orbit and Airbus OneWeb Satellites.

Tony Gingiss

Gingiss is leading Millennium’s team of 1,000 employees as they execute FOO Fighter, Missile Track Custody, TRACERS and next-gen and advanced space programs. With a strong background in small sat production and development, Gingiss will oversee the company’s continued production ramp-up and expansion of national security space missions.

Gingiss earned his bachelor’s degree in aeronautical and astronautical engineering from Purdue University and his master’s degree in aeronautics and astronautics from MIT. He was recognized with Purdue’s 2019 Outstanding Aerospace Engineer Award and was awarded a Charles Stark Draper Laboratories Fellowship.

“We’re pleased to welcome Tony back to Boeing as he takes the helm of Millennium Space Systems,” said Michelle Parker, vice president of Boeing Space Mission Systems. “Tony brings strong leadership and extensive experience that will help us scale our operations while meeting current commitments and driving growth for the business.”

“Our customers demand cutting-edge, high-quality and high-performance small satellites at an unprecedented pace,” said Tony Gingiss, CEO of Millennium Space Systems. “I am thrilled to lead this exceptional Millennium team as we deliver our national security space missions, increase our velocity and expand our market reach.”

Filed Under: News

Eutelsat selects Airbus Defence and Space to build OneWeb LEO constellation extension

December 19, 2024 by editorial

Eutelsat Group (Euronext Paris / London Stock Exchange: ETL) has selected Airbus Defence and Space to build the extension of the company’s OneWeb LEO constellation.

Under a contract signed between the two companies, Airbus will build the first batches of the extension, totaling 100 satellites, with delivery targeted starting end of calendar 2026, ensuring continuity and enhancement of service for current and future customers.

The new satellites will embark key technology upgrades, notably 5G, on-ground integration. They will be technologically compatible with Europe’s IRIS2 constellation, paving the way for its entry into operational service in 2030, and of which Eutelsat will be the main architect and operator of the LEO segment.

The procurement of these satellites is integrated within Eutelsat’s Capital Expenditure outlook for 2025, and fully compatible with its longer-term financial framework.

Eva Berneke, Chief Executive Officer of Eutelsat Group said:,“We are relying on our long-standing partner, Airbus, to begin building the first batches of the Next Generation of our OneWeb LEO constellation, which will ensure we deliver continuity of service of the existing constellation with enhanced service features, as we move towards an architecture in line with the IRIS2constellation in 2030. Our in-market experience shows us that the appetite for low Earth orbit capacity is growing rapidly, and we are excited to embark on the next stage of our journey to satisfy that demand.”

Filed Under: Featured, News

ICEYE closes million$$ extension to existing growth funding round

December 18, 2024 by editorial

ICEYE has closed a $65 million extension of the company’s earlier growth funding round of $93 million that was announced in April 2024.

The funding round extension included participation from funds managed by Solidium Oy, BlackRock, Seraphim, Plio Limited, and Christo Georgiev. The financing consists of a mix of debt and equity instruments and will increase investment in further developing ICEYE’s leading SAR satellite constellation, its intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) platform, and related systems. The extension brings the total amount raised in 2024 to $158 million. In total, ICEYE has raised over $500 million, to date.

ICEYE has achieved considerable growth during the past years and the investment announced today enables ICEYE to continue expanding its ISR capabilities to serve a global customer base while further cementing its market-leading position in the new space ecosystem. 

Susan Repo, CFO at ICEYE, said, “ICEYE has experienced unwavering momentum over the past few years. This extension of our growth funding round further bolsters ICEYE’s investment in its capabilities and enables us to respond even better to the growing demand for space-based technology in the global defense and ISR markets.”

Reima Rytsölä, CEO at Solidium, said, “Extending the growth funding to support ICEYE growth is well in line with our investment strategy. Our view is that ICEYE continues to have strong potential to grow to a nationally significant company and foster a completely new technology cluster in Finland.”

Citigroup acted as the exclusive private placement agent to ICEYE.

Filed Under: News

BlueHalo selected by NGA for assessments of commercially acquired GEOINT data

December 16, 2024 by editorial

BlueHalo has been selected as one of 10 vendors to provide unclassified commercial GEOINT-derived computer vision and analytic service capabilities for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency.

The five-year, indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity (IDIQ) contract, Luno A, is a $290 million follow-on to the Economic Indicator Monitoring contract, which used machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI) techniques, and accelerated analytic workflows to manage commercially purchased unclassified geospatial data.

This follow-on contract adds new context to analytic assessments by characterizing items such as worldwide economic, environmental and military activities.

Under the scope of the contract, contractors will use the commercial marketplace to acquire source imagery and data, allowing the agency to leverage the multitude of commercial GEOINT sources that have not been acquired by NGA, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), or other U.S. Government entities.

That data will be used to monitor infrastructure on a continental or global scale, survey country-level areas for specific types of activity and facilities, monitor city-sized areas for changes in infrastructure, and provide frequent updates of equipment and objects at installations.

“BlueHalo is proud to expand our support to NGA as one of the vendors selected to the Luno A contract,” said Brian Morrison, BlueHalo Portfolio President and Corporate Executive Vice President. “Our mature intel capabilities – ranging from signals intelligence to open-source threat intelligence – coupled with our deep expertise in utilizing machine learning and artificial intelligence in an era of big data, make BlueHalo an ideal partner for NGA as they work to pull actionable intelligence from a deluge of unclassified data.”

About BlueHalo
BlueHalo is purpose-built to provide industry-leading capabilities in the areas of Space, C-UAS and Autonomous Systems, Electronic Warfare & Cyber, and AI/ML. The company develops and brings to market next-generaHon capabilities to support customers’ critical missions and national security.

Filed Under: News

Esper + Loft team up for next-generation hyperspectral imagery

December 16, 2024 by editorial

Esper is collaborating with Loft Orbital (Loft) for the flight of the first, Four Leaf Clover (FLC) hyperspectral sensors on upcoming Loft satellites — the FLC constellation will support critical monitoring applications worldwide.

Under this agreement, Loft will integrate and operate FLC hyperspectral sensors onboard upcoming Yet Another Mission (YAM) satellites, beginning in 2026. The hyperspectral sensors will image hundreds of bands in the visible and shortwave infrared spectrum, and are designed to support a broad range of applications such as identification of critical minerals, detection of methane leaks, and precision monitoring for industries such as mining, agriculture, oil and gas, and more.

Esper selected Loft as its space infrastructure provider to integrate, launch and operate hyperspectral missions. 

Esper’s FLC constellation is especially well suited to support the sustainable mining industry, which has seen a boom in global demand for critical minerals like lithium and copper in recent years. Esper aims to enable companies to “unlock” these resources by providing insights to guide efficient mineral deposit identification and extraction while minimizing ecological impact. These mineral discoveries are instrumental in supporting renewable energy technologies that drive a fossil-fuel-free future.

Esper’s satellite data also addresses a range of climate-related applications, including methane emissions monitoring, oil spill detection, tailings monitoring, tracking production mining and ore grade tracking. 

Esper’s hyperspectral sensing technology focused on the infrared spectrum can detect and track objects of interest, from detecting camouflage and recently earthed minefields to tracking the movement of allied and adversarial military assets. ensuring national security of nation-states.

With the launch of their mission on Loft’s infrastructure in 2026, Esper’s hyperspectral imaging technology is set to bring actionable insights to customers who rely on precise data. Esper is actively engaging customers in industries that include mining, oil and gas, agriculture, and national security, with the goal of delivering satellite-based data that drives informed, impactful decisions.

Together, Esper and Loft are creating a new paradigm in space-based sensing, with a focus on a sustainable, climate-resilient future. 

“Esper is pushing the boundaries of hyperspectral remote sensing and redefining what can be done at scale with our next-generation hyperspectral satellite missions,” said Shoaib Iqbal. “With Loft’s powerful satellite infrastructure, we’re supporting our customers’ mission critical use cases across mining, agriculture, climate, oil and gas.”

“Esper’s FLC constellation is an ideal fit for Loft’s infrastructure,” said Mitchell Scher, Loft’s Senior Director of Business Development. “We want to let Esper focus on developing a high quality instrument and building new applications using their data, rather than becoming a space company to become a data and analytics company.”

Filed Under: News

Astroscale’s ADRAS-J achieves historic 15 meter approach to space debris

December 12, 2024 by editorial

Astroscale Japan Inc. has announced that the firm’s commercial debris inspection demonstration satellite, Active Debris Removal by Astroscale-Japan (ADRAS-J), successfully approached a large piece of space debris — a rocket upper stage — to approximately 15 meters — this is the closest approach ever achieved by a commercial company to space debris through Rendezvous and Proximity Operations (RPO).

ADRAS-J was selected by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) for Phase I of its Commercial Removal of Debris Demonstration. This latest approach, however, was an ambitious goal independently designed by Astroscale, in addition to JAXA’s baseline mission requirements. The objective was to demonstrate highly precise and complex close-range RPO capabilities by advancing to the Capture Initiation Point (CIP), where future debris removal missions start robotic capture operations.

When ADRAS-J was 50 meters behind the upper stage the spacecraft reduced the gap in a straight-line approach then maneuvered to approximately 15 meters below the Payload Attach Fitting (PAF) — the planned capture point for the follow-on ADRAS-J2 mission — aligning the spacecraft’s relative speed, distance, and attitude.

ADRAS-J successfully maintained this position until an autonomous abort was triggered by the onboard collision avoidance system due to an unexpected relative attitude anomaly with the upper stage. The spacecraft safely maneuvered away from the debris as designed before reaching the CIP. Astroscale Japan is currently investigating the cause of the abort.

While ADRAS-J did not reach its intended final distance, the mission demonstrated the robustness of its safety measures during simulated capture operations. The onboard Fault-Detection, Isolation, and Recovery system has ensured the spacecraft’s safety during all close-proximity operations, including the successful response and abort maneuver during the first fly-around observation attempt in July.

In addition to achieving the historic 15-meter approach, ADRAS-J successfully completed all observations of the debris required by the JAXA mission, including two fly-around operations that confirmed no major damage to the PAF and a third fly-around from a new angle of the upper stage. These accomplishments have provided critical data to inform the follow-on ADRAS-J2 debris removal mission, further advanced Astroscale’s heritage RPO and inspection capabilities for a wide range of on-orbit services and set a new benchmark for space sustainability.

Key ADRAS-J mission milestones since launch:

  • Feb. 18: launch and start of in-orbit operations.
  • Feb. 22: start of rendezvous phase.
  • Apr. 9: start of Angles Only Navigation and proximity approach from several hundred kilometers.
  • Apr. 16: start of Model Matching Navigation relative navigation techniques.
  • Apr. 17: approach to the upper stage within several hundred meters.
  • May 23: approach to the upper stage within 50 meters and first fixed-point observation completed.
  • Jun. 17: second fixed-point observation completed.
  • Jun. 19: start of fly-around operation and validation of collision avoidance system.
  • Jul. 14: approach to the upper stage within 50 meters. Third fixed-point observation completed.
  • Jul. 15: first successful fly-around observation.
  • Jul. 16: second successful fly-around observation.
  • Jul. 17: first final approach attempt, successfully reaching 20 meters.
  • Aug. 13: third successful fly-around observation.
  • Nov. 30: final approach, successfully reaching 15 meters.

Filed Under: News

HyImpulse unveils HyMOVE OTV + partners with Spacemanic for smallsat missions

December 12, 2024 by editorial

Artistic rendition of HyMOVE on-orbit, courtesy of HyImpulse.

HyImpulse Technologies GmbH has unveiled HyMOVE, the company’s Orbital Transfer Vehicle (OTV) that is designed to serve the rapidly expanding small satellite market—expected to grow to $30 billion globally by 2030.

HyMOVE is designed to enhance the capabilities of small satellite missions, delivering tailored in-space logistics for orbital missions. To mark this launch, HyImpulse has launched a partnership with Spacemanic Ltd., a leading nanosatellite mission provider, for as many as 10 missions over the next decade.

HyMOVE complements HyImpulse’s SL1 small launcher by providing efficient and flexible orbital solutions tailored to the needs of small satellite deployment. Supporting missions such as last-mile payload delivery, orbit insertion, and hosted payload services, the vehicle enables the deployment of multiple satellites into different orbital planes in a single launch.

Using environmentally friendly hybrid propulsion, HyMOVE ensures sustainable and cost-effective space operations to meet the growing demands of the space industry. Developed under the Bavarian Spaceflight Funding Program, HyMOVE will conclude ground testing in 2025 and commence commercial operations in 2029.

HyImpulse’s first commercial HyMOVE partner, Spacemanic, will use HyMOVE and the SL1 small launcher for nanosatellite deployment across up to 10 missions between 2026 and 2036. Both companies signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in August 2024 to collaborate on launch services.

The partnership combines Spacemanic’s expertise in CubeSat platforms with HyImpulse’s logistics solutions, including payload repositioning, multi-orbit deployment, and tailored in-space maneuvers. Powered by HyMOVE’s hybrid propulsion system, these services will enable Spacemanic to deploy and manage payloads with precision and efficiency across various orbital configurations.

With HyMOVE, HyImpulse is strengthening Europe’s capability for independent access to space. As demand for nanosatellites and flexible orbital services increases, the partnership with Spacemanic demonstrates how collaboration can advance Europe’s position in the global space sector.

Dr. Christian Scherer, CEO of HyImpulse, said, “HyMOVE enhances the capabilities of our SL1 vehicle, serving as a key extension of our value chain. It is tailored to meet a wide range of customer needs, providing solutions that complement and expand upon what SL1 already delivers. We are proud to partner with Spacemanic to deliver solutions that enable sustainable and cost-effective satellite deployment and orbital operations, contributing to the future of the European space industry.”

Daniela Jovic, Chief Commercial Officer at Spacemanic, said, “At Spacemanic, we’re proud to partner with HyImpulse on the HyMOVE initiative, a key step in strengthening Europe’s access to space. This collaboration allows us to push the boundaries of nanosatellite deployment and orbital operations, delivering smarter, more sustainable solutions for our customers and the broader space industry.” 

Filed Under: News

Forrester’s Digest: AST SpaceMobile signs up Vodafone

December 10, 2024 by editorial

AST SpaceMobile wants to be the world’s space-based cellular supplier. The company has already secured Verizon in the U.S. and has now signed Vodafone to a global agreement which runs until 2034.

Vodafone, and its own partner telcos, can offer AST’s space-based cellular broadband connectivity in its home markets and for its partner operators in Europe, Africa and parts of Asia. It operates in more than 20 markets under its own name and its partnerships operate in more than 40 others.

The deal is said to be potentially more valuable than the Verizon agreement, although financial terms were not revealed in AST’s December 9th announcement. Vodafone has been a financial investor in AST since 2018 and had an initial $25 million (€23.7 million) initial investment in the satellite company.

In April of 2023, AST and its partners completed the first-ever space-based voice call to an unmodified phone. That was followed by the first-ever 4G download speed above 10 Mbps in June 2023 and the first-ever 5G voice call in September 2023. Ultimately, the company and its partners have demonstrated over 20 mbps download speeds to unmodified phones on a 5 Mhz channel.

A Vodafone executive stated that the deal was a “landmark agreement” and would deliver cellular connections directly in Vodafone’s mission to provide space-based broadband connectivity directly to their customer’s and everyday cell phones. The agreement will eliminate “dead zones” and bring “true global connectivity to live and enhancing seamless and reliable service across the Vodafone footprint.”

AST SpaceMobile has also notified the FCC that all five of its Block-1 BlueBird satellites have been successfully deployed into their orbits consistent with conditions set forth in the FCC authorisations.

The task for AST is to now rapidly expand its existing fleet in order to achieve these global ambitions. It is looking to have more than 60 satellites on-orbit by the end of 2025 and thus begin its global coverage. Reach of these new satellites measure some 225 sq meters in area, and significantly larger than the existing first-generation craft, which measured 65 sq meters.

The company has agreements with more than 45 mobile network operators globally, which have more than approximately 2.8 billion existing subscribers total, including Vodafone Group, AT&T, Verizon, Rakuten Mobile, Bell Canada, Orange, Telefonica, TIM, Saudi Telecom Company, Zain KSA, Etisalat, Indosat Ooredoo Hutchison, Telkomsel, Smart Communications, Globe Telecom, Millicom, Smartfren, Telecom Argentina, MTN, Telstra, Africell, Liberty Latin America and others. AT&T, Verizon, Vodafone, Google, Rakuten, American Tower, Cisneros Group and Bell Canada are also existing investors in AST SpaceMobile.

Filed Under: News

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