SSTL expands LEO platform
capability with VESTA nanosatellite
Surrey Satellite Technology
Ltd (SSTL) has signed a contract with Honeywell to
supply the VESTA satellite platform, a technology
demonstration mission that will test a new two-way
VHF Data Exchange System (VDES) payload for the
exactEarth advanced maritime satellite
constellation. The contract was signed as part of an
MOU between Honeywell Aerospace and the UK Space
Agency.
John Paffett, SSTL’s Director of Telecommunications,
commented “The SSTL nanosatellite range provides
flexible and highly capable payload accommodation,
engineered with SSTL’s unrivalled class-leading
reliability and I am delighted that VESTA will be
first nanosatellite to be manufactured in our new
NanoLab here in Guildford.”
Leveraging SSTL’s extensive track record and proven
heritage in the provision of high quality, cost
effective small satellite platforms, VESTA is a new
configuration of the SSTL-12 satellite platform, a
product in SSTL’s scalable LEO platform range
covering 3kg to 1000kg. The SSTL-12 provides a
flexible mission solution offering more power, mass
and payload capability than many other current
offerings in this class and is ideally suited for
missions of between 3kg and 25kg.
VESTA is being manufactured in SSTL’s new NanoLab at
the Company’s Guildford facility under a rapid-build
schedule to meet a 2017 launch date. The VESTA
platform will have 3-axis pointing capability, an
SEU tolerant on-board computer, VxWorks operating
system and an S-Band transmitter and receiver. The
design is compatible with a range of launch
deployment systems for injection into orbit by
Soyuz, Antares, Dnepr, Falcon-9, Atlas, Delta and
Vega rockets.