HawkEye 360 Announces
Commissioning of Second Satellite Cluster
March 31, 2021
HawkEye 360 Inc., announced
that its recently-launched "Cluster 2"
satellites have achieved initial operating
capability. The trio of satellites, which
entered orbit aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in
January, have completed functional testing,
moved into proper formation, and begun to
geolocate RF signals. They are currently
supplying RF data to customers and will soon
ramp up output to reach full operating
capability.
HawkEye 360 Cluster 2
Initial Operations Data
"The commissioning of these
satellites is a major breakthrough for
commercial geospatial intelligence," said CEO
John Serafini. "As the leading global provider
of space-based RF insights, HawkEye 360 is
pleased that our newest satellites are
performing exceptionally well and delivering
high-quality RF data to our U.S. government,
international government, commercial and
humanitarian customers."
The Cluster 2 satellites
greatly improve upon the capabilities of HawkEye
360's first "Pathfinder" (Cluster 1) satellites.
The new satellites have redundant systems for
longevity, increased computing for on-board data
processing, a dedicated GNSS antenna to monitor
GPS interference, enhancements to HawkEye 360's
industry-leading geolocation accuracy, wider
range of RF frequency coverage, and up to 10
times more collection capacity.
"Cluster 2 and its
associated ground systems symbolize our ability
to rapidly deliver new impactful capability —
capability essential for supporting our clients'
evolving requirements for global commercial RF
data and analytics," said Executive Vice
President Alex Fox. "We have a robust roadmap
for deploying the most advanced commercial RF
solution required to support this high growth
industry. In conjunction with Mission Space —
our RF analytics platform — we are opening the
door for customers across a wide array of
industries to seamlessly harness valuable RF
insights to further their operational
objectives."
HawkEye 360 is launching
five additional clusters (15 total satellites)
to establish its baseline constellation. Cluster
3 is on track to launch June 2021, Cluster 4 for
October 2021, and further launches planned every
quarter thereafter through 2023. Once the
baseline constellation is in orbit, the company
will be able to maintain revisit rates of
considerably less than an hour to support
time-sensitive monitoring of developing defense,
security, and environmental situations.