Northrop Grumman to
Supply Navigation
System for South
Korea's
GEO-KOMPSAT-2
Satellites
June 10, 2014
Northrop Grumman
Corporation has been
awarded a contract
from the Korea
Aerospace Research
Institute (KARI) to
provide space
inertial reference
systems for the
GEO-KOMPSAT-2 space
satellite program.
Under a
firm-fixed-price
contract worth
nearly
$9 million,
Northrop Grumman is
providing its
Scalable Space
Inertial Reference
Units (Scalable SIRU™)
for the
GEO-KOMPSAT-2A and -2B
satellites. The
Scalable SIRU™
supplies
critical rotation
rate data that
enable the
stabilization,
pointing and
attitude control of
satellites and space
vehicles. The
contract includes an
option for one
additional unit to
be exercised by
July 2015 for
the KOMPSAT-6
program.
The GEO-KOMPSAT-2
satellites, which
are located in
geostationary orbit,
provide payloads for
meteorological,
space weather, ocean
and environment
monitoring missions.
GEO-KOMPSAT-2A is
planned for launch
in 2018, while the
GEO-KOMPSAT-2B
launch is expected
in 2019. The life
span of both
satellites is
expected to be at
least 10 years.
"The Scalable SIRU™
has displayed
unmatched
reliability and
proven high
performance during
countless space
missions," said
Bob Mehltretter,
vice president,
Navigation and
Positioning Systems,
Northrop Grumman
Electronic Systems.
"Our customers can
be confident that
our highly capable
systems will support
the most stringent
mission
requirements."
The Scalable SIRU™
is the
industry standard
for high-precision,
long-life attitude
control solutions
supporting
commercial,
government and civil
space missions. At
the heart of the
Scalable SIRU™ is
Northrop Grumman's
patented
hemispherical
resonator gyro (HRG)
technology. HRGs
have been used in
space without a
mission failure for
more than 26 million
operating hours and
have been launched
aboard more than 100
spacecraft.