Lockheed Martin And Northrop Grumman Deliver
Payload For Fourth SBIRS Missile Defense
Early Warning Satellite
Oct. 8, 2014
Prime contractor
Lockheed Martin and payload provider
Northrop Grumman have delivered the payload
for the fourth Geosynchronous Earth Orbit
(GEO) satellite of the U.S. Air Force's
Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS).
The payload,
delivered on Sept. 30,
will now be integrated with the SBIRS GEO-4
satellite bus in final assembly, integration
and test at Lockheed Martin's
Sunnyvale, California
satellite manufacturing facility.
The SBIRS program
delivers timely, reliable and accurate
missile warning and infrared surveillance
information to the President of
the United States, the
Secretary of Defense, combatant commanders,
the intelligence community and other key
decision makers. The system enhances global
missile launch detection capability,
supports the nation's ballistic missile
defense system, expands the country's
technical intelligence gathering capacity
and bolsters situational awareness for
warfighters on the battlefield.
The SBIRS GEO-4
payload includes highly sophisticated
scanning and staring sensors, which will
provide the satellite with improved infrared
sensitivity and a reduction in area revisit
times over the legacy constellation. The
scanning sensor will provide a wide area
surveillance of missile launches and natural
phenomena across the earth, while the
staring sensor will be used to observe
smaller areas of interest with superior
sensitivity.
"The completion of
this payload is a critical milestone keeping
us on schedule for delivering the SBIRS
GEO-4 satellite to the Air Force in 2016,"
said
Louie Lombardo,
director of Lockheed Martin's SBIRS
Follow-on Production (SFP) program. "This
payload delivery -- the third of four
payload deliveries for the SBIRS SFP program
in the past 15 months -- further
demonstrates that SBIRS is in the regular
cadence of full production."
"This is an
unprecedented production rate of
sophisticated infrared payloads for
operational deployment," said
Anne Ostroff,
vice president of the Military/Civil Space
and Ground business area, Northrop Grumman.
"The performance of payloads on-orbit has
been excellent and demonstrates unique
capabilities that are needed to address
current and evolving threats."
The SBIRS
architecture includes a resilient mix of
satellites in GEO, hosted payloads in Highly
Elliptical Orbit (HEO), and ground hardware
and software. The GEO-1 and GEO-2 satellites
have been launched and both received Air
Force Space Command Operational Acceptance
in 2013, with performance that matches, and
in some cases exceeds, requirements. GEO-3
recently completed acoustic testing and is
currently undergoing thermal vacuum testing.
In June 2014,
the Air Force contracted Lockheed Martin for
full production of GEO-5 and GEO-6.