Lockheed Martin Awarded Contract To Make Non-Traditional
Sensor And User Data Available For Space Situational
Awareness
Jan. 9, 2014
Lockheed Martin will continue tracking
and sharing data on orbiting space assets and debris through a
$3.9 million contract from the
U.S. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center. Under this
contract, Lockheed Martin will continue to develop the
Non-Traditional Data Pre-Processor (NDPP) under the Integrated
Space Command and Control (ISC2) contract.
ISC2 is responsible for providing
conclusive and timely air and missile warning information to the
President of
the United States, Joint Chiefs of Staff and the
Prime Minister of
Canada if
North America ever comes under attack. In
addition, ISC2 provides space situational awareness to the
United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) and Air Force Space
Command utilizing inputs from the Space Surveillance Network to
accurately track and catalog more than 23,000 space objects.
The NDPP is a key step forward in
exposing data in support of the protection of valuable space
assets like the International Space Station. In 2009, the
Iridium-33 communications satellite and
Russia's Kosmos-2251 military satellite collided
creating a large amount of space debris. Since that time,
government and commercial organizations around the globe have
been working to improve space object tracking through improved
collaboration.
"The cars we drive on Earth have
mirrors and sensors to prevent bumps and scrapes, but if you're
trying to avoid rapidly moving debris in space, you'll need
enhanced situational awareness," said
Rob Smith, vice president of
C4ISR Systems with Lockheed Martin IS&GS. "Space has no national
borders so it's important to share collected data to protect all
the space assets currently orbiting the planet."
The NDPP system is an expansion of the
ISC2 space data server, and it extends the communications
infrastructure allowing operators to share data between sensor
and satellite sources around the world with the Joint Space
Operations Center (JSpOC) at Vandenberg Air Force Base. The
JSpOC maintains the space object catalog that many countries
depend on to safeguard the valuable investment they have in
space.
NDPP will provide a conduit across
multiple security levels that will allow both sensor and
satellite operators around the world to share data to improve
the accuracy of the space object catalog. In return, sensor and
satellite operators will have a new tool for receiving timely
space object catalog products.