Lockheed Martin Selects
Mission Payload Providers for Missile Warning
Satellite System
March 1, 2022
Lockheed Martin has selected
Raytheon Technologies Corporation to provide a
second mission payload for the Next Generation
Overhead Persistent Infrared Geosynchronous Earth
Orbit Block 0 missile warning satellite system –
also known as NGG. Both Raytheon Technologies and
Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) are each
already on contract to provide one mission payload
for the three-satellite procurement.
Lockheed Martin is currently
under contract with the United States Space Force
(U.S.S.F.) Space Systems Command (SSC) to build
three survivable NGG satellites with enhanced
missile warning and resiliency capabilities to stay
ahead of the emerging threats. As part of
risk-reduction efforts to meet the U.S.S.F.’s
imperative to launch the first satellite by 2025,
Lockheed Martin selected Raytheon Technologies and
Northrop Grumman/Ball Aerospace to develop mission
payload designs. The payload designs from both
competitors have completed the critical design phase
and are on track to fly on the first two NGG
satellites. It has yet to be determined which
payload will be aboard the first NGG satellite
launched in 2025.
“For this ‘Go-Fast’ program,
both teams had to meet stringent schedule and
performance requirements – which they’ve done. I
want to congratulate and thank both teams for their
tireless work and we look forward to the first
flights of both the mission payloads,” said Joseph
Rickers, Lockheed Martin’s NGG program vice
president. “These advanced OPIR payloads will
support the critical mission by leveraging
technologies with new capabilities on an aggressive
schedule.”
For this rapid acquisition
program, both competitive payload teams were
selected and placed under contract just 45 days
after the prime contract was awarded to Lockheed
Martin in 2018. Aiming to have their advanced
payloads eventually integrated into Lockheed
Martin’s resilient LM2100 Combat Bus™ space vehicle,
the teams quickly completed preliminary design
reviews in 2020 and critical design reviews in 2021.
Both teams successfully completed environmental
testing of their payload engineering development
units.
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