DARPA Kicks Off
Program to Develop Low-Earth Orbit Satellite
‘Translator’
8/10/2022
DARPA has selected 11 teams for
Phase 1 of the Space-Based Adaptive Communications
Node program, known as Space-BACN. Space-BACN aims
to create a low-cost, reconfigurable optical
communications terminal that adapts to most optical
intersatellite link standards, translating between
diverse satellite constellations. Space-BACN would
create an “internet” of low-Earth orbit (LEO)
satellites, enabling seamless communication between
military/government and commercial/civil satellite
constellations that currently are unable to talk
with each other.
The agency selected teams from
academia and large and small commercial companies,
including multiple performers awarded first-time
contracts with the Department of Defense.
“We intentionally made making a
proposal to our Space-BACN solicitations as easy as
possible, because we wanted to tap into both
established defense companies and the large pool of
innovative small tech companies, many of which don’t
have the time or resources to figure out complicated
government contracting processes,” said Greg
Kuperman, Space-BACN program manager in DARPA’s
Strategic Technology Office. “We used other
transactions and were very pleased with diversity of
organizations that responded and quality of
proposals. After a successful Phase 0 where we got
to see the teams sprint to put together an initial
architecture design for Space-BACN, I'm excited to
get to work in Phase 1 building the actual system.”
In the first technical area,
the following performers aim to develop a flexible,
low size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C) optical
aperture that couples into single-mode fiber:
CACI, Inc.
MBRYONICS
Mynaric
The following teams selected in
the second technical area aim to develop a
reconfigurable optical modem that supports up to 100
Gbps on a single wavelength:
II-VI Aerospace and Defense
Arizona State University
Intel Federal, LLC
The performer teams listed
above will also participate in a collaborative
working group to define the interface between their
respective system components.
In a third technical area, the
agency selected five teams to identify critical
command and control elements required to support
cross-constellation optical intersatellite link
communications and develop the schema necessary to
interface between Space-BACN and commercial partner
constellations:
Space Exploration Technologies
Telesat
SpaceLink
Viasat
Kuiper Government Solutions
(KGS) LLC, an Amazon subsidiary
Phase 1 of Space- BACN spans 14
months and will conclude with a preliminary design
review for the first two technical areas, as well as
a fully defined interface between system components.
The third technical area will develop the schema for
cross-constellation command and control, and will
conduct a connectivity demo in a simulated
environment to test the schema for a baseline
scenario.
At the completion of Phase 1,
selected performers in the first two technical areas
will participate in an 18-month Phase 2 to develop
engineering design units of the optical terminal
components, while performers in the third technical
area will continue to evolve the schema to function
in more challenging and dynamic scenarios.
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