Raytheon awarded contract for 3rd Visible Infrared Imager
Radiometer Suite
Aug. 12, 2013
Raytheon Company has received a
contract from NASA to develop a Visible Infrared Imager
Radiometer Suite for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration's Joint Polar Satellite System-2 spacecraft. This
is the third VIIRS unit Raytheon has been contracted to build.
JPSS is a joint program of NOAA and
NASA that provides critical observations to improve the accuracy
of weather forecasting. Raytheon built the first VIIRS
instrument for the JPSS-precursor Suomi NPP spacecraft, which
was successfully launched into orbit in
October 2011, and is building a second unit for the first
JPSS spacecraft.
"The meteorology community has
expressed overwhelmingly positive feedback for the data VIIRS
provides," said
Bill Hart, vice president of
Space Systems for Raytheon's Space and Airborne Systems
business. "VIIRS has set new benchmarks in low light imagery and
shown itself to be an indispensable tool in developing highly
accurate, timely forecasts that are used to protect life and
property during major weather events."
VIIRS collects imagery in 22 spectral
bands, allowing scientists to understand global weather and
climate patterns in greater detail than ever before. Flying on
the JPSS family of satellites, VIIRS will maintain the
continuity of critical data records established with predecessor
instruments such as the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view
Sensor (SeaWiFS), also developed by Raytheon.
Construction of the JPSS-1 VIIRS
instrument continues on track for delivery in 2014.