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US Space Development Agency orders 8 hypersonic weapon tracking satellites from SpaceX and L3 Harris

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WASHINGTON — Both SpaceX and and L3 Harris will contribute hypersonic weapon tracking satellites to the Space Development Agency’s planned mega-constellation, with the nascent agency announcing it had selected the two companies to build its first wide field of view satellites Oct. 5.


Under the contracts, each company will design and develop four satellites equipped with wide field of view (WFOV) overhead persistent infrared (OPIR) sensors. Operating in low Earth orbit, the sensors will make up the inaugural tranche of the SDA’s tracking layer—the Pentagon’s new effort to track hypersonic weapons from space.

“This SDA tracking layer is going to consist of a proliferated, heterogeneous constellation of WFOV space vehicles that provide persistent global coverage and custody capability. That’s going to combine with activities in the Missile Defense Agency as they build toward their Hypersonic and Ballistic Tracking Space Sensor (HBTSS) medium field of view (MFOV) space vehicles,” Acting Deputy Undersecretary for Research and Engineering Mark Lewis told C4ISRNET.


According to the announcement, SpaceX will receive $149,175,246 while L3 Harris will receive $193,599,342. According to SDA Director Derek Tournear, the awards were the result of a full and open competition, with the selection based purely on technical merit.

SpaceX has made waves with its Starlink constellation—a constellation built to provide commercial broadband from low Earth orbit—and the Department of Defense has tested using Starlink to connect various weapon systems. However, the company does not have a history building OPIR sensors. According to Tournear, the company will be working with partners to develop the sensor, which it will then place on a bus it is providing. SpaceX already has a production line in place to build a bus based on its Starlink technologies, added Tournear.


“SpaceX had a very credible story along that line—a very compelling proposal. It was outstanding,” he said. “They are one of the ones that have been at the forefront of this commercialization and commodification route.”

On the other hand, L3 Harris will develop an OPIR solution based on their decades of experience with small satellites, small telescopes and OPIR technologies.


“They had an extremely capable solution. They have a lot of experience flying affordable, rapid, small satellite buses for the department,” noted Tournear. “They had the plant and the line in place in order to produce these to hit our schedule.”

TRACKING HYPERSONIC WEAPONS

The contracts are just the latest development as the SDA fleshes out its National Defense Space Architecture (NDSA), a new constellation to be comprised of hundreds of satellites primarily operating in low Earth orbit. The satellites will make up tranche 0 of the SDA’s tracking layer, which will provide global coverage for tracking hypersonic threats.


The glue that holds the NDSA together will be the transport layer, a space-based mesh network made up of satellites connected by optical intersatellite links. Like most planned SDA satellites, WFOV satellites will plug directly into that network.

“The idea is it connects to the National Defense Space Architecture—the NDSA transport layer—via optical intersatellite links,” said Lewis. “And that will enable low latency dissemination for missile warning indications. It will provide track directly to the joint war fighters.”

SDA issued two contracts in August for its first 20 transport layer satellites. York Space Systems was awarded $94 million to build its 10 satellites, while Lockheed Martin was awarded $188 million.

That transport layer capability is essential to the tracking layer’s mission.

Because they are so much closer to the Earth’s surface than the U.S. Space Force’s missile tracking satellites in geosynchronous orbit, the WFOV sensors will naturally have a much more limited field of vision. In order to track globe traversing hypersonic missiles, the WFOV satellites will have to work together. Once the first satellite picks up a threat, it will begin tracking it until it disappears over the horizon. That whole time, it will be transmitting its tracking data to other WFOV satellites over the transport layer. So as the first satellite loses sight of the threat over the horizon, the next WFOV is ready to pick it up, and so on and so forth.


From there, the WFOV satellites will pass the tracking data—either directly or via the transport layer—on to the medium field of view satellites being developed by the Missile Defense Agency as their HBTSS.

“SDA is developing the low cost proliferated WFOV space vehicles that provide the missile warning and the tracking information for national defense authorities, as well as tracking and cueing data for missile defense elements,” explained Lewis. “Meanwhile, the Missile Defense Agency is developing the high resolution HBTSS MFOV space vehicles—those can receive cues from other sources including the WFOV system—and they’ll provide low latency fire control quality tracking data.”

“The MFOV HBTSS satellites will then be able to hone in and actually be able to calculate the fire control solution for that missile, send those data to the transport satellites with a laser comms system … and then the transport system will disseminate that to the weapons platform as well as back to [the continental United States, where MDA can broadcast that information],” added Tournear.

MDA issued $20 million contracts to Northrop Grumman, Leidos, Harris Corporation and Raytheon to develop HBTSS prototypes in Oct. 2019. Tournear noted that proposals for HBTSS “are being written as we speak.”

Together, HBTSS and the SDA’s tracking layer are meant to provide the data needed to take out hypersonic threats—which Congress is increasingly concerned by.


“It’s part of an integrated DoD OPIR strategy. So the wide field of view sensors and the medium field of view sensors are really integral to this whole NDSA system and legacy strategic missile warning capability,” said Lewis, praising MDA and SDA for working together to build a heterogeneous solution.

SPIRAL DEVELOPMENT

Of course, this initial tranche won’t provide global coverage up front. As part of its spiral development approach, SDA plans to continuously add satellites to its mega-constellation in two-year tranches, with each tranche including more advanced technology. The tracking layer is not expected to reach global coverage until 2026, said Tournear.

But as the constellation is built out, the more limited initial capabilities will be used to help integrate the space-based assets with war fighters.


“We call tranche 0 our war fighter immersion tranche,” said Tournear. “What that means is, its goal is to provide the data in a format that the war fighters are used to seeing on tactical timelines that they can be expected to see once we actually become operational. The whole purpose of tranche 0 is to allow the war fighters to start to train and develop tactics, techniques and procedures so that they can create operational plans for a battle where they would actually incorporate these data.”

With tranche 1 in 2024, the tracking and transport layers will essentially reach initial operating capability, said Tournear. That will include persistent regional coverage.

According to Tournear, the tranche 0 satellites are set to be launched in September 2022.

Tournear told C4ISRNET his agency is planning to issue a separate solicitation for launch services later this week. That solicitation will cover all of the tranche 0 satellites, including the 20 transport layer satellites the agency ordered in August, the eight WFOV satellites and the HBTSS satellites.

https://www.c4isrnet.com/battlefiel...ders-8-hypersonic-weapon-tracking-satellites/
 
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The Space Development Agency today announced awards to L3Harris and SpaceX to develop missile tracking and detection satellites for the first tranche of the agency's tracking layer.

L3Harris received a $193 million award and SpaceX's contract -- its first for national security satellite development -- is valued at $149 million. Each company will develop and deliver four satellites. The satellites, part of SDA's "Tranche 0" capability, will have a WFOV payload sensor and an optical crosslink that allows it to relay data to other space vehicles.

SDA's director, Derek Tournear, said in a statement that today's awards represent a "next step" toward fielding the National Defense Space Architecture.

"The SDA Tracking Layer is an integral part of the [Defense] Department's overall overhead persistent infrared strategy to detect, track, and defeat advanced missile threats," Tournear said in a statement. "We are confident these fixed-price awards will help us deliver the initial tranche of the Tracking Layer on schedule."

SDA envisions its tracking layer will be composed of two key capabilities: the WFOV satellites awarded today that provide missile warning and tracking information as well as cueing data for missile defense; and the Missile Defense Agency's Hypersonic Ballistic Missile Tracking Sensor program's medium-field-of-view satellites, which will be designed to receive cues from other systems and provide low-latency tracking data on hypersonic threats.

The constellation will be launched to low-Earth orbit and will connect to another element of SDA's National Defense Space Architecture, the transport layer, through optical intersatellite links. SDA in September awarded contracts to Lockheed Martin and York Space Systems to each build 10 satellites for Tranche 0 of the agency’s transport layer.

Up to eight WFOV tracking satellites are slated to launch as part of Tranche 0 -- along with the transport satellites -- and up to two of MDA's MFOV tracking satellites are slated for launch in 2023. An SDA official said in a statement the two agencies' capabilities will be designed to be compatible with one another's integration requirements.

The Pentagon has moved to transfer authority for the space sensor layer effort from MDA to SDA, but lawmakers have pushed back on the proposal. House appropriators said in their mark of fiscal year 2020 defense spending legislation that while they support collaboration between the two agencies, they're worried the Pentagon's plan prioritizes funding for SDA’s work over HBTSS.

Tournear praised the agency's partnership with MDA on the effort.

"We look forward to working collaboratively with industry and our government partners like MDA to deliver a tracking solution that puts critical information in the hands of the joint warfighter at or ahead of the speed of the threat," he said.

https://insidedefense.com/insider/sda-awards-contracts-l3harris-spacex-wfov-tracking-satellites
 
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