Lockheed Martin's Sixth and
Final SBIRS Missile Warning Satellite Successfully
Launched, Now Under U.S. Space Force Control
Aug. 4, 2022
Following a successful
launch from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in
Florida today, the U.S. Space Force is now
communicating with the sixth Space Based Infrared
System Geosynchronous Earth Orbit (SBIRS GEO) -6
satellite, built by Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT).
The final satellite in the
SBIRS program series, GEO-6 joins the U.S. Space
Force's constellation of missile warning satellites
equipped with powerful scanning and staring infrared
surveillance sensors.
"The need for Overhead
Persistent Infrared systems has never been more
critical," said Michael Corriea, vice president of
Lockheed Martin Space's Overhead Persistent Infrared
(OPIR) Mission Area. "At Lockheed Martin, we are
making advancements to keep pace with evolving needs
based on emerging threats in our military customers'
environment, helping pave the way for the future."
The GEO-6 satellite is a
stepping stone toward the resilient missile warning
to be provided by SBIRS' successor, the Next
Generation OPIR GEO System (NGG). Like SBIRS GEO-5
and GEO-6, NGG will be based on Lockheed Martin's
modernized LM 2100 Combat Bus™, which provides
additional capabilities such as cyber hardening,
resiliency features, enhanced spacecraft power, and
improved propulsion and electronics.
The SBIRS GEO-6 satellite is
responding to the U.S. Space Force's commands as
planned. Signal acquisition was confirmed 3 hours
and 43 minutes after the satellite's 6:29 a.m. EDT
lift off aboard a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas
V rocket. The satellite is now orbiting under its
own propulsion following separation from the rocket.
The onboard sensors collect data that allow the U.S.
military to detect missile launches, support
ballistic missile defense, expand technical
intelligence gathering and bolstering situational
awareness on the battlefield.
A Step Toward More Resiliency
The OPIR mission has become
more critical as ballistic missile technology has
proliferated around the world with over 1,000
missile launches tracked annually. Lockheed Martin
recognizes that modernized technology is needed to
augment the current missile warning architecture and
improve resiliency against attacks.
"SBIRS GEO-6 fortifies the
current missile warning architecture, and it also
signifies that we are on our way to achieving even
greater technological capacity and expanded coverage
with NGG," Corriea said.
Lockheed Martin is proud to be
part of the SBIRS team led by Space Systems
Command's Space Sensing Directorate at Los Angeles
Air Force Base. Lockheed Martin Space, Sunnyvale,
California, is the SBIRS prime contractor, with
Northrop Grumman of Azusa, California, as the
payload supplier.
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