Northrop Grumman and Intelsat Make History with Docking of Second Mission Extension Vehicle to Extend Life of Satellite
April 12, 2021
Northrop Grumman
Corporation (NYSE: NOC) and the company’s
wholly-owned subsidiary, SpaceLogistics LLC,
have successfully completed the docking of the
Mission Extension Vehicle-2 (MEV-2) to the
Intelsat 10-02 (IS-10-02) commercial
communications satellite to deliver
life-extension services.
Northrop Grumman is the
only provider of flight-proven life extension
services for satellites, and this is the second
time the two companies have docked commercial
spacecraft in orbit. Northrop Grumman’s MEV-1
made history when it successfully docked to the
Intelsat 901 (IS-901) satellite in February
2020. Unlike MEV-1, which docked above the GEO
orbit before moving IS-901 back into service,
MEV-2 docked with IS-10-02 directly in its
operational GEO orbital location.
“Today’s successful docking
of our second Mission Extension Vehicle further
demonstrates the reliability, safety and utility
of in-space logistics,” said Tom Wilson, vice
president, strategic space systems, Northrop
Grumman and president, SpaceLogistics LLC. “The
success of this mission paves the way for our
second generation of servicing satellites and
robotics, offering flexibility and resiliency
for both commercial and government satellite
operators, which can enable entirely new classes
of missions.”
MEV-2 will provide five
years of service to IS-10-02 before undocking
and moving on to provide services for a new
mission. IS-10-02 delivers broadband and media
distribution services to Intelsat customers
across Europe, the Middle East, Africa and South
America; it is a key satellite in the
Intelsat-Telenor Satellite 1˚ West video
neighborhood, which distributes more than 900
channels to some 18 million TV households across
Europe. Telenor Satellite own about half of
IS-10-02’s Ku band payload, which it markets as
THOR 10-02 and contributed to today’s successful
mission.
“Intelsat has pioneered
innovations in space-based technology for more
than five decades. We are proud to work side by
side with Northrop Grumman on today’s
groundbreaking mission, the first-ever docking
of a communications satellite in GEO orbit,”
said Intelsat Chief Services Officer Mike
DeMarco. “Space servicing is a valuable tool for
Intelsat in extending the high-quality service
experience that our customers depend upon.
Northrop Grumman’s MEV technology has helped us
extend the life of two high-performing
satellites, while focusing our innovation
capital on advancing the Intelsat
next-generation network – this technology is a
‘win-win’ for us.”
The Mission Extension
Vehicle is the first in Northrop Grumman’s
lineup of satellite servicing vehicles, but
following last year’s robotic servicing mission
award from DARPA, the company is working with
the agency on a mission that will feature the
first-ever commercial robotic servicing
spacecraft. This mission will expand the market
for satellite servicing of both commercial and
government client satellites with advanced
robotics using the company’s Mission Robotics
Vehicle (MRV) to conduct in-orbit repair,
augmentation, assembly, detailed inspection and
relocation of client satellites through
robotics.
To further complement its
on-orbit servicing portfolio, Northrop Grumman
is leveraging model based systems engineering to
develop its Mission Extension Pods (MEPs) which
will also provide critical life extension
services to aging satellites. The MRV will be
used to install these pods on existing in-orbit
commercial and government client satellites to
extend their mission lives. The company is
targeting 2024 for launch of both the MRV and
the initial MEPs.
B-roll and animation
footage for the mission can be found here.
Photos for the mission are attached.