Raytheon Intelligence &
Space awarded Missile Track Custody development
contract
January 4, 2023
Raytheon Intelligence & Space
has been awarded a prime contract to develop a
prototype Missile Track Custody system for the U.S.
Space Force. MTC is the service’s first Medium Earth
Orbit missile tracking system.
Under this contract, Raytheon
Intelligence & Space will serve as the prime
contractor, developing and delivering a space
vehicle, hosting a state-of-the-art missile tracking
mission payload and ground-based command and control
and mission-data processing elements. This system
was developed using model-based systems engineering
significantly increasing the speed of development,
while reducing cost.
Raytheon Intelligence & Space
will also deliver the command and control and
real-time mission- data processing elements for MTC.
The ground system will use the Future Operationally
Resilient Ground Evolution Mission Data Processing
Application Framework (FORGE MDPAF). Raytheon’s
FORGE MDPAF is a ground system framework that
collects and processes data from satellites,
including Overhead Persistent Infrared (OPIR) space
vehicle data from both Space Force’s Space-Based
Infrared System (SBIRS) constellation and the future
Next-Generation OPIR constellation.
“This is an advanced solution
to counter emerging missile threats facing our
country,” said Roger Cole, executive director,
Strategic Systems programs, Raytheon Intelligence &
Space. “From its MEO perch, our system will enable
Space Force to accurately detect and track
adversarial hypersonic weapons with precision
accuracy.”
Raytheon Intelligence & Space’s
mission payload, which passed critical design review
in November 2022, will be integrated onto an LM400
satellite bus. The LM400, part of Lockheed Martin’s
modernized family of satellite designs, emphasizing
commonality, rapid production speed, and reduced
costs, includes SmartSat,™ software-defined
satellite capabilities that allow it to adapt to
changing mission needs and deploy new capabilities
to stay ahead of evolving threats.
“Lockheed Martin is excited to
provide our mid-sized, rapidly-producible LM400 bus
to Raytheon, supporting our customer’s mission to
deliver initial warfighting capability with Missile
Track Custody Epoch 1,” said Mike Corriea, vice
president, Lockheed Martin’s Overhead Persistent
Infrared mission area. “Lockheed Martin will
leverage a full suite of digital engineering tools
to produce satellites that are dramatically more
responsive and flexible, at a fraction of the cost
and delivery time for our customers.”
The team plans to complete a
system critical design review in 2023, followed by a
build, integration, and test campaign to deliver
capability to orbit by 2026. Work for this program
will be executed in El Segundo, California, and
Aurora, Colorado.
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