Lockheed Martin will
demonstrate the value of its
flexible GPS III design over
the next 26 months, as part
of the Air Force's GPS III
Space Vehicles 11+
Production Readiness
Feasibility Assessment. On
May 5,
the Air Force awarded
Lockheed Martin a
$5
million contract for
Phase 1 of this procurement
for future GPS III
satellites.
Lockheed Martin has already
made advancements on the Air
Force's future GPS III
requirements. In 2013 the
company completed a
preliminary design review
for two key future
requirements: the
accuracy-boosting Laser
Retro-reflector Array and a
hosted payload for search
and rescue missions.
The current GPS III block
design is already the most
powerful GPS satellite ever
built, which enables GPS
III's eight-times
anti-jamming capability. For
future GPS III satellites,
the Air Force is requiring
Regional Military
Protection, which will allow
them to direct even more
capability into specific
contested and challenging
environments.
"Lockheed Martin has already
made significant progress in
the area of Regional
Military Protection and we
are confident our GPS III
will be able to bring
enhanced capability to the
warfighters wherever and
whenever they need it," said
Mark
Stewart,
Lockheed Martin's vice
president for Navigation
Systems. "With this and the
addition of a long-planned,
fully-digital navigation
payload, our GPS III design
will provide the Air Force
with maximum flexibility for
all their current and future
missions."
For much of Lockheed
Martin's progress and
advanced risk reduction
already completed, Stewart
credits the Air Force's
previous investment, the
Back to Basics program and
the use of an innovative
satellite prototype known as
the GPS III Nonflight
Satellite Testbed (GNST).
The company used the GNST to
already prove its GPS III
design was compatible with
the next generation ground
control system and the
existing GPS constellation
back in 2013.
"Innovation like the Air
Force's GNST helped us
retire most risks when
adding these latest
capabilities," Stewart says.
"Our design for GPS III
builds on our plan to drive
costs down with increased
efficiencies."