Northrop Grumman's Delivery of Modular Space Vehicle Means
Faster, Flexible, Small Satellite Launch Capabilities
26 February 2014
Battlefield
commanders have long wanted satellites that can be assembled
quickly and launched rapidly to meet immediate needs. Now they
have that capability with the plug-and-play Modular Space
Vehicle (MSV) delivered Feb. 25 by
Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC).
The MSV is the first open systems
spacecraft bus that supports a top priority of launching
smaller, less expensive satellites in a matter of weeks for
short-term missions – a capability commonly referred to as
"responsive space."
A Northrop Grumman-led team designed
and built MSV in 30 months under a task order valued at
approximately $50 million. The
company delivered the MSV to the Operationally Responsive Space
Office at Kirtland Air Force Base, N.M., which leads U.S.
military efforts to shorten satellite development time.
"Because MSV is the first to implement
space plug-and-play standards with simplified, standard hardware
and software interfaces, the bus is loaded with flexibility,"
said
Doug Young, vice president,
Missile Defense and Advanced Missions, Northrop Grumman
Aerospace Systems. The MSV bus has the flexibility to:
"MSV provides ways for future
development of rapid response space capabilities that will be
timely, cost-efficient and flexible," Young said. "A satellite
bus contains the support structure and control subsystems that
allow the payload to perform its mission."
Rapid development capabilities and
expertise developed under MSV have been incorporated into the
company's Eagle line of spacecraft bus products as MSV/Eagle-1M™.
They were demonstrated previously in the same approach the
company took for building and launching NASA's successful Lunar
CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite for the agency's Ames
Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., in just 27 months.
The MSV bus was integrated and tested
at Applied Technology Associates,
Albuquerque, N.M., one of five core subcontractors
on the company's team. Team members also include Design Net
Engineering,
Golden, Colo.; Microcosm Inc.,
Hawthorne, Calif.; Advanced Defense Systems,
Columbia, Md.; and Space Dynamics Laboratory,
Utah State University, Logan, Utah.