What's new

Israel Space Industry

DavidSling

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Oct 25, 2013
Messages
4,826
Reaction score
0
Country
Israel
Location
Israel
The Israel Space Agency is sponsored by the Ministry of Science, Technology and Space, and is responsible for the coordination and supervision of all the activities of the civilian space program. The Space Agency is based on the recognition of the importance of research and development. The Agency supports scientific research and development with real economic potential, such as the development of unique and innovative technologies. Moreover, the Agency’s philosophy is that involvement in the space sector contributes to Israel’s economy, strengthens its international standing and and benefits its residents in areas such as agriculture, communications, detection of environmental contaminants and research.

The Israel Space Agency’s goals are many and diverse, including expanding the cooperation and reciprocal relationships with various countries in the field of space, promoting infrastructure research studies in the academia and at research institutes, leading the world trend of miniaturizing satellites, supporting the development of unique innovative space technologies at the aerospace industries, cultivating a reserve of future space scientists by promoting space education and projects in the community, and generally expanding Israel’s relative advantage in the field and positioning it as one of the world’s leading countries in the study and use of space technology.

Another goal of the Space Agency is to strengthen the connection of children and youth to the space sector, to satisfy their great natural curiosity with regard to this field and to expand their knowledge and interest in space. The Space Agency organizes activities and events for the public at large that offer interactive experience in the space fields. Each year, there are celestial observation of distant worlds, which are a source of inspiration. The Space Agency organizes national contests for students, supports technological projects such as the launch of the Duchifat 1 miniature satellite, etc. The Agency organizes conferences and seminars for educators and develops training programs for teachers and instructors in cooperation with the Education Ministry and the Israel Astronomy Society.

Israel’s Space Industry
Israel has a long standing successful space heritage, including technological development, applications and durable and competitive products of the space industry. The Space Program was established in the 1980s, at which time, Israel was the eighth country in the world to succeed in launching and positioning satellites in space. Its main goal was and still remains to establish a comprehensive infrastructure for space study. Israel has been forced to deal with security challenges and a shortage of resources; and consequently, it has focused on miniaturizing the technology and developing small, light satellites with high resolution, remote sensing and communication capabilities. Israel is currently considered a world leader in this industry: a small country with a large relative technological advantage in the field. Israel’s space industry is primarily engaged in the development, production and operation of satellites, the sale of communication services and remote sensing.

Israel specializes in the development of technologies for miniature satellites and methods for launching them. Based on this technological expertise, a number of Israeli groups are currently developing microsatellites and nano-satellites in order to demonstrate how various technologies and applications work, in order to examine and authenticate them.

Israel’s space industry focuses on high resolution photographic satellites that are positioned in the Low Earth Orbit (LEO) and communication satellites positioned in the Geocentric Orbit (GEO). Despite a relatively modest budget, the achievements of Israel’s Space Program since 1988 are the most impressive of Israel’s advanced technology industry’s achievements. In terms of cost-effectiveness and high performance in relation to low weight, Israel’s imaging satellites are considered the leaders in the global arena. Among Israel’s satellites in space is the Amos - a series of five communication satellites, Ofek - ten satellites for intelligence gathering, Eros - two photography satellites and the Techsat 2 research satellite.


IAC 2015 in Israel
The IAC is the one place and time of the year when all space actors come together. Global, multidisciplinary and covering all space sectors and topics, it offers everyone the latest space information, developments but above all contacts and potential partnerships. Each year, the IAC changes country, theme and local organizer, enabling all to learn more about, and be a part of the world space scene.
This year, Israel is proud to host the annual IAC.
About The Israel Space Agency | ISA

SpaceIL
 
Last edited:
Satellite programs
The Israel Space Agency has had a long history of satellite programs both for reconnaissance and commercial purposes. Its first satellite, the Ofeq-1 was launched on September 19, 1988, from Palmachim Airbase in Israel. Since the launching of that first satellite, Israel has developed into a significant player in the commercial space arena. Today, the ISA satellite launches include:

Ofeq - Series of reconnaissance satellites. The first of these was launched from the Palmachim site on September 19, 1988.
Amos - Series of communications satellites
Eros - Series of observation satellites
Techsat - Researching satellite launched by the Technion
TechSAR - a SAR-based observation satellite.
Ofeq Satellite Series

Ofeq-3
Main article: Ofeq
After the successful launch of the Ofeq-1 in 1988, additional satellites were developed. In 1989, the ISA launched the Ofeq-2; in April 1995, it took a leap forward with the launch of Ofeq-3, which carried an advanced electro-optical payload built by Israeli industry for local purposes. Ofeq-3 has been functioning without a hitch. Following a setback with Ofeq-4, Ofeq-5 was successfully launched in May 2002.

To date, ten such satellites in the Ofeq reconnaissance satellites series were developed and launched to Low Earth Orbit. The most recent Ofeq-10 was launched April 9, 2014.

Amos Satellite Series

The Amos is a series of communications satellites. The Amos satellites are by the Israel Aerospace Industries and are operated by Spacecom once in orbit. The Amos-1, the first satellite in the series, was launched on May 16, 1996 using a French-built vehicle. Since then, 4 more satellites were launched. The most recent Amos satellite is the Amos-5 which was launched on December 11, 2011.

The Amos is distinguished for its light weight and sophisticated technology. The Amos-6 is set to be launched in 2016 in order to replace the Amos-2 which will cease operation then.

EROS Satellite Series

The EROS-B Satellite

The Earth Resources Observation Satellite (EROS) is a series of commercial observation satellites. The first satellite, the EROS A, was launched on December 5, 2000 from Svobodny Launch Complex using a Russian Start-1. A second satellite, the EROS B, was launched on April 25, 2006.

The EROS series are set to be launched once every 6 to 8 years. The EROS C is set to be launched in late 2014.

TechSAR Satellite

The TechSAR satellite is a reconnaissance satellite equipped with a synthetic aperture radar. The satellite is designed penetrate thick clouds by being fitted with a large dish-like antenna to transmit and receive radar signals. The satellite was successfully launched on January 21, 2008.

Launch capabilities[edit]

Shavit Rocket

Shavit launcher

The Israel Space Agency is one of only seven countries that both build their own satellites and launch their own launchers. The Shavit is a space launch vehicle capable of sending payload into low earth orbit.The Shavit satellite has been used to send every Ofeq satellite to date.

The development of the Shavit began in 1983 and its operational capabilities were proven on three successful launches of the Ofek satellites on September 19, 1988; April 3, 1990; and April 5, 1995. The Shavit launchers allows low-cost and high-reliability launch of micro/mini satellites to a Low Earth Orbit. The Shavit launcher is developed by Malam factory, one of four factories in the IAI Electronics Group. The factory is very experienced in development, assembling, testing and operating system for use in space.

The Shavit is a triple-stage launcher solid propellant booster based on the 2-stage Jericho-II ballistic missile. The first and second stage engines are manufactured by Ta'as, and use solid fuel.The third stage engines are manufactured by Rafael Advanced Defense Systems. The next generation Shavit rockets, now called the Shavit-2 are being developed. The Shavit-2 is said to be made available for commercial launches in the near future.

Palmachim Spaceport
The Israel Space Agency operates the spaceport located in Palmachim Air Force Base. The launchpad is situated at 31°53′04″N 34°40′49″E.

Due to Israel's geographic location and hostile relations with surrounding countries, launches takes off due west, over the Mediterranean Sea. This is done in order to avoid flying over hostile territories.[9] This is also to prevent possible debris from falling above populated areas. This limitation imposes a penalty of roughly 30% on its lifting capabilities.
Some of the recent ISA launches include:
June 11, 2007 - Ofeq 7 satellite
June 22, 2010 - Ofeq 9 satellite
April 10, 2014 - Ofeq 10 satellite
A number of additional launches are set for mid to late 2014 and 2015.
 
“Satellites enable us to deal with every theatre and threat”

Exactly two years ago, the military "Ofek 10" satellite was launched from Palmahim AFB. In commemoration of the launch which added another member to the group of Israeli satellites floating around in space, we set out for a quick look at the world of satellites in the IAF and what the future has in store


September 19, 1988. Following a long development period, the military "Ofek 1" satellite is launched and becomes the first Israeli satellite in space. The launch of the intelligence gathering satellite was a significant breakthrough, brought advanced technology and consisted of an unwritten statement of the Israeli intent to enter the space age. Over the years, Israel has established its position in the field, developed different systems and expanded the "Ofek" satellite series.

"Ofek 10", the most recent satellite in the series, was launched from Palmahim AFB this week two years ago. Now, all that remains is the question of when will the next Israeli satellite be launched to space and what are the challenges ahead?

70506.jpg

The launch of the "Ofek" 1 Satellite | Photography: Shalom Bar Tal

Israel: a world leader in the military satellite field
The IAF's full name is "The Air and Space Arm". In Israel in general and the IAF in particular, there is a common understanding that the Israeli Space Program holds strategic significance and it enjoys the position of a world leader in the field.

"Satellites are a tool which allow us to look beyond the horizon, see and investigate all of our areas of interest and best deal with the theatres and threats we deal with", explains Maj. Guy, Head of the Advanced Signals Intelligence and Space Department in the IAF. "Satellites enable communication anywhere and anytime. They are a power multiplier and garner a large amount of products for the force".

The Israeli satellites add another layer to the interpretation of the aerial image which is carried out by intelligence units in the IAF and IDF, which hold great importance in the strategic and tactic aspect for the strength of Israeli security. "The Israeli satellites' life span is long and we enjoy their products for a long time, but we are working on improving the resolution and availability and want to advance in to diverse fields of knowledge", shares Maj. Guy. "The main challenge in the field is launch. We must consider the launch area and make sure that no debris falls, so everything has to be very calculated".

70507.jpg

The launch of the "Ofek 10" Satellite | Photography: Ministry of Defense & Israel Space Agency

PRVT. Yam, a satellite expert
Alongside the photography satellites, the IAF operates other satellites whose missions cannot be revealed, however Yam Eshbel's story, CEO of the first Student Satellite Project, who serves as an Officer in the Satellite Department of the IAF Material Directorate, we can share with pride.

On June 19, 2014, the project's engineers, with Eshbel Among them, entered a Russian military base and waited for the launch of the first Israeli Nano-Satellite which was launched alongside other Nano-satellites from around the world.

The launch of the "Duchifat 1", whose main goal is to be an educational platform for students and to motivate students to take part in space studies and also to be part of a search and rescue network that picks up distress signals in areas isolated from communication infrastructure, might have been the peak, but Eshbel's story began two years prior.

In high school, Eshbel attended the Science Center in Herzliya, where generations of students worked long hours for years on completing an ambitious project that was already in its final stages of theoretical research that preceded the construction of what the future Israeli Nano-Satellite would be.

"In the first class that was called 'Satellite and Space' with Dr. Anna Heller, I met an energetic woman who introduced herself as Doctor of Astrophysics. During the first 15 minutes of class, she went over the material for the next three years and dedicated the remaining 30 minutes to presenting the satellite", recalled Eshbel. "She said that she isn't looking for genius students, but for those with a sparkle in their eyes, those who will view the project as a vision and those who will give the project their all. I decided to join because of that sentence".

From the moment he joined the project, Eshbel began dedicating much of his free time to building the innovative Nano-Satellite. He came twice a week, at the expense of his free time and served as a mini-engineer, so simultaneously with his social life and exams which occupy every average high school student, he was responsible for making the "Duchifat 1" vision a reality. "As a kid I found space interesting, but I never thought I would actually work in the field, definitely not today", he admits and remembers his draft, when he was recruited to be integrated in the IAF Technical Division.

Today, Prvt. Eshbal serves in the IAF Satellite Dept. and is surrounded by experienced Officers and career servicemen, but that doesn't stop him from being a satellite expert with personal experience which contributes added value to the department. "It turns out that the Israeli space community is quite small, so we were easily recruited by the former head of the department", he concludes. "Today I see myself staying here for years ahead".

@500 @PARIKRAMA @sarjenprabhu @Blue Marlin @mike2000 is back
 
IAI is developing a New "Ofek" Spy Satellite for the Israeli Defense Ministry
Israel Defense has learned that IAI's Space Division is building a new electro-optical spy satellite. The Israeli Defense Ministry gave no comment

Ami Rojkes Dombe | 6/09/2016

Send to a friend
A+A-Size
Share on
Share on
aaa-580x287.jpg

The Launch of the Ofek-10 in April 2014

Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) is in the process of building a new electro-optical spy satellite as part of the "Ofek" series.

The previous "Ofek" satellite, which was launched in 2014, was equipped with an SAR radar. It appears that the new satellite that is being built is an electro-optical satellite. On average, according to IAI's rate of developing spy satellites, the company builds such satellite every two years.

Judging by the Israeli Defense Ministry's four previous satellites, it seems that the trend is to order one satellite with a radar and then another one with a camera. This strengthens the estimate that if the previous satellite had a radar, the current would be an optical one. The cameras of the Israeli spy satellites are built by Elbit Systems.

Both IAI and the Israeli Defense Ministry gave no comment.
http://www.israeldefense.co.il/en/c...w-ofek-spy-satellite-israeli-defense-ministry
@Penguin @500 @Natan @Archdemon @GBU-28 @F-15I @mike2000 is back @Blue Marlin @Mountain Jew
 
Last edited:
IAI is developing a new series of spy satellite "Ofek" for the Ministry of Defense


This is an optical spy satellite built by Space Factory IAI, Israel has learned to locate Defense. The Defense Ministry did not respond

Ami Rohks Domb | 6/09/2016

send to a friend
A +A-Size
Share on
Share on
aaa-580x287.jpg

Ofek satellite launch April 10 2014

IAI is in the process of building a new optical spy satellite series "Horizon" has learned that Israel Defense website.

Previous satellite Ofek satellite series was launched in 2014 and was a radar satellite SAR. Apparently, the new satellite will have an optical satellite. If you look at the pace of development of the IAI surveillance satellites can see that the average company builds such satellite every two years.

Another trend that is (at least four previous satellites), the Defense Ministry invites one satellite with radar and followed with a camera. What strengthens the assessment that if the previous one was radar, a camera will be present. The camera surveillance satellites Israel's Elbit Systems builds.

The Defense Ministry did not respond.

IAI did not respond.

translated via google translate

http://www.israeldefense.co.il/he/content/תעשייה-אווירית-מפתחת-לווין-ביון-חדש-מסדרת-אופק-עבור-משרד-הביטחון

@Penguin @500 @Natan @Archdemon @GBU-28 @F-15I @mike2000 is back @Blue Marlin @Mountain Jew
It is good that soon israel continue to create satellites, after what happened to Amos
 
Israel Launches New Spy Satellite, Ofek 11

The satellite's predecessor, Ofek 10, was launched in 2014. The Ofek satellites make about 800 photography sorties annually, filming 64,000 minutes worth of footage each year.

Gili Cohen Sep 13, 2016 5:45 PM
3627463755.JPG

Ofek 10's launch. April 9, 2014.Defense Ministry and Israel Aerospace Industries
Israeli satellite lost during SpaceX test launch in Florida
Earth to space minister: Israel's space industry in dire straits
Israel has launched a new military satellite, security officials said Tuesday.
The Ofek 11 was sent into space from the Palmahim air base, south of Tel Aviv, at 5:30 P.M. as surveillance aircraft patrolled the nearby Mediterrean skies.
Israel prefers to launch its satellites against the Earth’s rotation, toward the sea, and not in an easterly direction as other countries do.
Israel Aerospace Industries will conduct tests to make sure it is working properly once the satellite stabilizes its orbit.
The defense establishment gleans intelligence from about 10 satellites, including Ofek satellites made by IAI, and commercial satellites which produce images for the Israel Defense Forces and other intelligence agencies.
The Israel Defense Forces said that these satellites make about 800 photography sorties annually, filming 64,000 minutes worth of footage each year.
The satellite's predecessor, Ofek 10, was launched in 2014, and the Ofek 9 was sent up in 2010.
Two weeks ago Israel lost its latest civilian satellite ahead of its launch when the launcher for the AMOS 6 blew up in Florida.
IAI chief executive Yossi Weiss has accused Israel of lacking a long range satellite program.
“The State of Israel isn’t looking at what’s going on around it. It invests smaller sums than what’s happening in the world, and it’s far from where it should be. We are marching in place,” Weiss said .
read more: http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/1.741864

@Penguin @500 @Natan @Archdemon @GBU-28 @F-15I @mike2000 is back @Blue Marlin @Mountain Jew @Solomon2
 
Last edited:
Israeli Defense Ministry: “Continuous contact with Ofek-11 has been attained”
The Israeli Defense Ministry gave its official confirmation that the Ofek-11 reconnaissance satellite that was launched last week has in fact been stabilized and transmitted first images from space.
Sep 22, 2016, 4:00PM

ofeq220916.jpg

Continuous contact with the satellite has been attained Photo Credit: Channel 2 News

Following the publication on JOL News yesterday (Wednesday), Head of the Space Administration at the Israeli Defense Ministry Amnon Harari confirmed today that the Ofek-11 satellite transmitted pictures from space. “We activated the satellite’s cameras and the images look great,” he stated. “We examined all the satellite’s systems and are in continuous contact with it. It will provide us with operational productivity thanks to the joint effort of the engineering and operation teams at the Defense Ministry and Israel Aerospace Industries.”

“We have worked together in order to reach the very impressive achievement in the form of lovely images,” stated Head of the IAI’s MBT Space Division Ofer Doron. “We managed to stabilize Ofek-11. We cannot give any details regarding its capabilities but the main thing is that we have excellent images. It was a difficult birth and the satellite’s operation is complicated but nonetheless we managed to get exceptional images.”

Yesterday, the claims that Ofek-11 transmitted first pictures from space were initially denied but now they have been officially confirmed, as has the fact that continuous contact with the satellite has been achieved.

http://www.jerusalemonline.com/news...ry-confirms-ofek-11-has-been-stabilized-23799
 
Spies in space: The story of Israel's Ofek satellite program

How the successes of those who dare to dream can stagnate under those who fail to follow through.

ShowImage.ashx


An engineer works on a small chamber at a laboratory at Israel Aerospace Industries in Lod in May 2014. (photo credit:HEIDI LEVINE)

If you’re looking for a story that captures Israeli innovation, cunning and can-do chutzpa, think spy satellites. Look to Ofek, the Hebrew word for horizon. It’s all there in Israel’s military satellite program, the newest of which – Ofek 11 – is struggling to stabilize itself in space after its launch earlier last week.

Inserted successfully into orbit by the country’s homemade Shavit launcher, the newest and most advanced satellite is likely to soldier on in space, but with limited lifespan and ability to perform its high-resolution spy duties. White-knuckled technicians and program managers toiling around the clock at Israel Aerospace Industries’ (IAI) ground control station near Ben-Gurion Airport are still hoping for a favorable ending to the latest chapter still unfolding. But like the chapters that have gone before, Ofek 11 represents the highs and lows of a story driven by strategic need and enhanced by its share of diplomatic intrigue. Conceived in secret, it’s a story of battling the laws of physics; and struggling on a shoestring budget to build rockets strong enough to loft satellites small enough into retrograde orbit against Earth’s eastward spin.

It’s also a story of fortitude. How the euphoria of reaching space in 1988 was followed by bitter back-to-back failures that saw two satellites swallowed by the sea. And how the heroes of our story finagled their way back from the brink with the 1995 launch of Ofek-3, Israel’s first operational imaging satellite whose progeny continue to fuel the regional power status of the Jewish state.

“Small countries can be great only if they dream big,” said former president Shimon Peres. “With Ofek, we penetrated space and skepticism.”
Interviewed before the stroke that befell the pioneer of Israel’s aerospace and defense industry, Peres said Israel’s small size makes it uniquely positioned as a “center of excellence” for advanced research and development. “Our advantage is creative, out-of-the-box thinkers who push the boundaries of what was deemed impossible.”

But with all due respect to Israel’s senior statesman, this is where our tale takes a cautionary turn.

Because the flip side of this story is one of untapped potential and failure to leverage billions of dollars invested in military space to assure commercial competitiveness on the global market.

The US Futron Corp. consistently ranks Israel eighth in an annual competitiveness survey based on myriad criteria, including government investment, national space policy, the ability to attract financing and annual sales. In its latest Space Competitive Index (SCI), we have dropped to number nine.

“Israel continues to be a leader in space technology, but has limited commercial sales,” Futron reported in its first SCI survey from 2008. The same holds true today.

“Although Israeli technology is high quality and generally cost-competitive, Israeli manufacturers have less global scale than their counterparts,” Futron senior analyst Jonathan Beland told the Jerusalem Post Magazine.

But let’s go back.

ShowImage.ashx
An engineer works inside the bus of a OPSAT 3000 satellite in a laboratory at Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) in Lod in May 2014 (photo credit: HEIDI LEVINE)

OUR STORY begins in the late 1970s.

US President Jimmy Carter was proving relentless in prodding Israel and Egypt toward peace. In the run-up to Camp David, the era of Israeli Air Force reconnaissance flights over Sinai was about to end.

Plan Treasure was a top-secret forum where US and Israeli officials hashed out compensation to come from the 1978 accord. Among Israel’s requests: access to imagery from US spy satellites.

“The Americans didn’t even answer us; they ignored the request,” recalls David Ivry, a retired major general who commanded the Israel Air Force at the time. That’s when the indigenous Israeli satellite program started to gain traction. Ivry said. “We knew after the treaty was signed, we would be obliged not to violate Egyptian sovereignty by overflying their airspace as we used to do,” he added.

Even prior to the US slow-roll, Israel had been dabbling in military satellite research. Rafael Ltd., then an R&D arm of the Defense Ministry had the lead, but all three Israeli government-owned firms were involved in aspects of rocketry.

In any case, Israel did not start from scratch with continuously upgraded versions of the three-stage Shavit rocket that launches Ofek into space.

From here our story turns to the courageous few who fought for funding as fiercely as the technological hurdles blocking their way.

Chaim Eshed is a key protagonist.

He’s now a retired brigadier general, teacher and chairman of the national committee for space R&D, but then a young Air Force lieutenant colonel working technical issues for military intelligence. Eshed ran the Ofek satellite part of the program, subsequently serving for decades as Israel’s military space czar.

Another key character in our story is Uzi Rubin. An aeronautical engineer hailing from the IAI, Rubin headed the Shavit launch effort for the Defense Ministry and went on to establish Israel’s missile defense organization.

Together they toiled in secret – without the benefit of external assistance or outside consultants – on tenuous funds, working with guys named Moshe Bar- Lev, Aby Har-Even, Ilan Porat and a few dozens of others involved in the effort.

Success was achieved in September 1988, when the Israeli-built Shavit launched a test satellite named Oz into space. With Oz – Hebrew for courage – Israel joined only seven other nations at the time to launch satellites in space.

Confidence grew with a second success. Just 18 months after the first Oz entered orbit, another Shavit launched Oz number 2, another test satellite capable of communicating with its ground-based operators, but not yet endowed with a payload to capture images from space.

As testament to their confidence of the horizon ahead, they changed the name of the satellite program from Oz to Ofek. But that horizon proved elusive with two failures that followed.

Problems with the Shavit rocket sent two Ofeks fully equipped with imaging cameras plummeting into the sea.

TO THIS day, Israel only acknowledges one failure – of Ofek 2 in September 1994 – prior to the successful April 1995 launch of Ofek 3. The name change offered a convenient cover for public consumption, but those back-to-back failures put the program on borrowed time.

No courage and conviction would save them from another failure.

“After the first failure, there was tremendous pressure to cancel the project. But we managed to continue,” recalls Ivry, who by this time was chief executive of the Defense Ministry.

“After the second failure, it was really a crisis. I managed to find a small amount of money to keep the team and continue the program… But I must say, if it failed yet again, we wouldn’t have been able to proceed,” Ivry said.

Eshed estimates the penalty of launching from Israel westward – over the Mediterranean rather than above its neighbors – at nearly 40 percent. To make up for it all, the launcher had to lift well above its weight class and Ofek satellites had to weigh a lot less and be more maneuverable than those that benefit from the initial velocity from Earth’s rotation.

Every kilo counts, so much so that Israel had to develop new composite materials and super performing substructures. Even the screws holding it all together had to be hollow.

From his high-rise Tel Aviv sea-view flat, Eshed credited “the shadow of the guillotine” for the engineering feats.

“We had no choice. To do otherwise could be construed by our neighbors as an act of belligerence that could trigger a war… We had to struggle both ways with miniaturization of the satellite and added thrust to our launchers. Under the shadow of the guillotine, we can do wonders.”

In an interview at a popular Tel Aviv café, Rubin remembered the intense pressure to perform.

“We were out of money. We were desperate. And then the chief of my financial department figured out an aggressive accounting formula that basically allowed us to build the next launcher on credit, something that was not and is still not permitted.”

As they struggled to identify and fix failures with the launcher, a separate team was racing to ready a replacement satellite.

“We were caught in a vise; pressed by both ends to come up with the launcher and satellite that would finally succeed,” said Moshe Keret, former president and chief executive officer of IAI, the state-owned firm that still builds the Shavit launcher and all Israeli-made satellites.

With no more satellites on the shelf and no funds for new builds, they scavenged for the components that would transform a test satellite into an operationally capable vehicle.

“It was a qualification model; not flightworthy. But we had to make it work,” recalls Uzi Eilam, a retired brigadier general who managed the entire effort as head of the Defense Ministry’s research and development directorate.

After overcoming the breakdown of tracking radars, and other upsets too many to count, Israel managed to find a window between freak rainstorms and Russian satellites orbiting overhead for the ultimately successful April 1995 launch. Ofek 3, Israel’s first orbital spy, finally made it to space.

Rubin said he would never forget the reaction of then-prime minister Yitzhak Rabin upon hearing the news.

“Uzi [Eilam] and I went to brief Rabin, and when we told him the satellite was going to take pictures, the first thing he blurted out was, ‘What will Amr Moussa say?’ ... Rabin hated his guts,” Rubin said, referring to Egypt’s foreign minister at the time.

Like earlier high points, success proved short-lived, when a January 1998 launch failure sent Ofek 4 plummeting into the Mediterranean. After that setback, the program was again in crisis; actually on the brink of bankruptcy.

ShowImage.ashx
Engineers by a collimator at a laboratory at Elop in Rehovot in April 2014 (photo credit: HEIDI LEVINE)

BUT A big part of this story is refusing to go down for the count.

Here’s where Ilan Biran enters in a big way. A retired major general who hailed from Israel’s can-do Golani infantry brigade, Biran succeeded Ivry as Ministry of Defense managing director.

When informed by his bosses that no more funds would be approved for the program, what did he do? He sold some 1000 MoD-owned apartments, from Safed in the Galilee down to Eilat on the Red Sea, netting some 400 million shekels ($115.69 million), enough, he maintained, to keep the program afloat for the coming years.

“It doesn’t sound like a lot of money, but for us, it was plenty enough to stabilize the program,” Biran recalled.

“Instead of carrying on month-by-month or – in best cases – year-by-year, we finally had the multi-year funding that brought us additional electro-optic satellites and especially the all-weather/ day-night SAR [synthetic aperture radar] satellite, which at the time, was a kind of dream,” he said.

Israel went on to deploy that first radar satellite, dubbed TecSAR, ahead of schedule in January 2008, thanks in large part to Biran’s real estate sales and funding from India, according to publications. Now known as Ofek 8, TecSAR was the first MoD satellite to be launched abroad; part of a joint venture agreement whose details remain under wraps to this day. The satellite was launched in India from an Indian PSLV launcher.

At the same time, Biran threw Defense Ministry support into a new commercial venture that joined IAI, the nation’s sole satellite producer; Elbit’s Elop Electro-Optical Industries, producer of the high-resolution payload; and a commercial US firm then called Core Software Technology.

The resulting company, ImageSat International (ISI), would own and operate Ofek spinoff satellites for the commercial market under a new line called Eros (Earth Remote Observation System). Their first Eros reached orbit in December 2000 aboard a Russian Start-1 rocket.

And it’s a good thing that it did, because at the time, Israel’s defense establishment was still struggling to upgrade its Shavit launcher from the Ofek 4 failure while its sole pair of eyes in the sky – Ofek 3 – was running out of fuel. For nearly two years – from the eventual hero’s death of Ofek 3 until the successful May 2002 deployment of Ofek 5 – that Eros satellite was Israel’s prime source of space-based intelligence.

In the years that followed, Israel continued to put increasingly higher performance satellites into space, while suffering just one additional failure, that of Ofek 6 in 2004.

But instead of reaping the commercial benefits of the ImageSat venture – which aspired to a constellation of eight Eros satellites – turf battles and competing agendas led to the largest and most potentially damaging lawsuit in Israeli aerospace history.

IAI finally resolved the issue in 2014 by acquiring full control of ISI and settling claims out of court. Today, it has sole authority over the Eros satellite sector and is busy building a third Ofek-derived commercial satellite, dubbed Eros C.

Experts including Tal Inbar of the Fisher Institute for Strategic Air and Space Studies lament the lost time spent battling one another instead of growing Israel’s observation satellite sector.

“This industry was built to support strategic needs, but we all knew it could never survive only on low volume orders from the MoD. In order to be truly self-sustaining, we needed to export,” Inbar said.

But barring a few notable exceptions – which include an imaging payload to South Korea and joint scientific projects with the French, Italian and European Space Agencies – export and commercial orders failed to come. Industry titans at the time were in such distress they went public with heretofore closed-door appeals for state-level funding.

“We’ve had some successes, but on balance, it’s been a failure,” Haim Rousso, former president of Elbit Elop, a publicly traded firm that provides Israel’s electro-optical imaging payloads, told an international conference here in early 2011.

“We Israelis, instead of relying on chutzpah and innovation to cover our share, must be able to tap into a significant, long-term, non-military budget, not crumbs,” Rousso said.

For years, the Israel Space Agency had been subsisting on a joke of a budget; a mere $700,000 in 2000 that failed to breach the $1 million level until recently. After years of complaints and threats to close down key parts of Israel’s satellite sector, the Treasury, in 2012, authorized 200 million shekels ($57.67 million) over two years.

Today, the Israel Space Agency’s budget stands at 78 million shekels for 2017 and 86 million shekels for 2018.

Zvi Kaplan, a former Israel Space Agency director, welcomed the budget boosts, yet cautioned: “If you don’t come out with a satellite every two or three years, the line goes cold. Your technology grows stale. And even if you manage to secure new collaborative projects every four or five years, if they are persistently plagued by funding flow, the market catches up.”

But ours is a tale with an ending unknown.

ShowImage.ashx
From left to right: Ilan Biran, Chaim Eshed, Uzi Rubin (photo credit: HEIDI LEVINE)

IF YOU ask Joseph Weiss, IAI president and chief executive, it’s already a feelgood story, and much like good wine, Weiss says the story only gets better with time.

“Look what we’ve done since the Camp David days, when less than a handful of countries could utter the word ‘space.’ We dived into an empty pool and slowly and surely, without budget, here we are: one of only eight or nine in the world who can really deliver a turnkey project to design, develop, manufacture, launch, operate and of course maintain the satellite throughout its life.”

Weiss acknowledged numerous disappointments and missed opportunities. Among them, failure to translate the performance of the indigenous Shavit launcher into a business success; a failed joint venture with state-owned Rafael to develop micro-satellites weighing less than 120 kilograms; and competitions lost in Turkey.

The IAI chief insists the firm’s earth imaging sector is not only surviving, but profitable, due to steady work from the Defense Ministry and occasional export orders. “Now I’m not saying its billions. That will take some time. Perhaps we’ll need some partners.”

Aside from Ofek 11, which was recently sent into space, two other IAI-built imaging satellites – one of the French Space Agency and another for the Italian Space Agency – are planned for launch in 2017. The firm is also building, as noted, the Eros C and at least two more successors to Ofek 11. As for new business, IAI is eyeing Brazil, Chile, Columbia and Mexico, among others.

Equally upbeat is Isaac Ben-Israel, a retired major general and former head of the Defense Ministry’s Research and Development Directorate who now serves as chairman of the Israel Space Agency.

Ben-Israel led the effort to vector for commercial and civil space the approximately $80 million that the government invests annually in its military space program. He maintains that every dollar the government invests in space can yield fruit 15 times more than initial investment.

“I’m telling you that with $100 million investment, we can get to $1.5 billion, which is about 1 percent of the global space market. This year, the global space sector is about $200 billion all told – products and services – and all I want to get is one percent.”


MEANWHILE, ESHED, our protagonist from the beginning of this tale, refuses to stop dreaming big. He’s now pushing to develop a world-leading sector for nano-satellites, each comprising several units weighing one-to-10 kilograms programmed to operate in small clusters or even huge swarms.

He’s gathering inter-ministerial government support for a national program called “Israel 70,” which aims to launch 70 such satellites built by 70 different local schools to mark Israel’s 70th birthday in 2018.

“Imagine a swarm of 2000 nano-satellites working coherently together; you can get a huge aperture telescope far larger than the sum of their individual parts.”

Eshed acknowledges that this vision is yet not widely shared by Weiss and other big players in Israeli industry.

But he insists Israeli industry salvation will not be achieved with more and better of the same, but by a whole new class of capabilities for government, commercial and scientific needs.

“Israel has all the means of becoming the world’s fourth or fifth leading power in space… We have the manpower, we have the technology, we have 30 years of heritage, and that’s the direction I’m trying to move us in,” said Eshed.

“You can dream the dream as long as it does not contradict the laws of physics. You may need to be courageous; even a little crazy, but that’s what happened with Oz and Ofek. It’s the same story.”

http://www.jpost.com/Magazine/Spies-in-space-The-story-of-the-Ofek-satellite-program-468405

@Penguin @500 @Natan @Archdemon @GBU-28 @F-15I @mike2000 is back @Blue Marlin @Mountain Jew
 
Last edited:

Back
Top Bottom