ExoTerra, Virgin Orbit Win NASA SBIR Award
NASA has awarded Littleton,
CO-based ExoTerra Resource a Phase II Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) award for
the firm’s solar electric propulsion upper
stage, currently under development in
partnership with California-based launch
services provider Virgin Orbit.
The upper stage will be
able to deliver 150 kg of payload to cis-lunar
orbit and 180 kg to Geostationary Earth Orbit
(GEO), as well as enable exciting interplanetary
missions — opening up a path to space beyond Low
Earth Orbit (LEO) for small satellites.
“ExoTerra is excited to
work with NASA and Virgin Orbit to enable
microsatellites and micro-landers to reach GEO,
the Moon and interplanetary destinations from
responsive small launch vehicles. We believe
this capability will open up opportunities for
rapid, affordable missions throughout the inner
solar system and GEO,” said ExoTerra’s CEO
Michael VanWoerkom.
Virgin Orbit is
enthusiastic to serve as a commercial infusion
partner with ExoTerra on this upper stage
program, as the company is pushing technology
forward to provide the most flexible launch
services in the world. The team is working both
internally and with partners like ExoTerra to
provide a full suite of capabilities for
customers interested in sending high-performing
payloads to LEO, deep space, and everything in
between.
“This award falls squarely
on our development roadmap. It’s an exciting
technology that we’re looking forward to
integrating with LauncherOne in order to better
serve customers across a broad set of
communities: scientific, academic, government,
commercial, and more,” said Virgin Orbit CEO Dan
Hart. “Small satellites have become powerful
tools for business, research and education, and
they too deserve an affordable, flexible route
to space beyond just LEO.”