Dstl have awarded a
£9.5m contract for the build of the Titania
satellite
To be launched in 2023 and
approximately the size of a washing machine, the
satellite will support the ‘Titania Operational
Concept Demonstrator’ which is exploring the
military utility of Low Earth Orbit (LEO)
direct-to-earth free-space optical
communications (FSOC).
As modern battlespace
technology requires increasingly high bandwidth,
FSOC has the potential to transform military
communications with its ability to transfer
large volumes of data, with a low risk of
detection or interception.
The technology works by
transmitting the data at high speeds via narrow
laser beam between two very specific points. In
this case Titania will communicate with ‘Puck’,
Dstl’s new Optical Ground Station – carrying on
the tradition of the UK naming space projects
and satellites after Shakespearian characters.
Dstl’s space programme
manager, Dr Mike O’Callaghan said: The Titania
space mission will accelerate the development
and adoption of space-based optical
communications, allowing our Armed Forces the
ability to operate in an increasingly contested
environment.
The Titania satellite will
support the UK space sector and provide a solid
foundation on which to conduct experimentation
into FSOC and allow the science to be developed.
We are delighted to be working with In-Space
Missions on this highly innovative project.
With transfer speeds of
multi-Gigabytes per second, the increased rate
of data transfer provided by FSOC will enable
faster military decision making, and when
launched, Titania will focus on demonstrating
the rapid transfer of Intelligence, Surveillance
and Reconnaissance data.
This world-leading science
will inform choices for military space
capabilities and could be utilised for future
military satellite communications, potentially
providing high speed connectivity to link air,
land and maritime platforms.
The satellite will be built
in the UK by Hampshire-based In-Space Missions,
with the contract directly supporting 20 jobs at
the company and in the UK supply chain. Forming
an important part of developing the MOD’s space
capability, the contract follows the recent
launch of UK Space Command at RAF High Wycombe,
which saw the headquarters of Defence space
capabilities and operations officially ‘stood
up’.
Commander of UK Space
Command, Air Vice Marshal Paul Godfrey said:
Following our stand-up as a Joint Command, the
Titania satellite contract is the next exciting
step for the UK in space.
It’s a brilliant example of
the partnerships being developed and enhanced
across the UK space enterprise, developing
capabilities that not only enable military
operations, but underpin countless activities
essential to our way of life and the safety of
our nation.
Supported by the £24
billion uplift announced by the Prime Minister
last year, the programme reaffirms commitments
outlined in the Defence Command Paper with a
focus on developing space capabilities and
operating in this domain. The construction of
the Titania satellite is part of the MOD’s
investment of over £1.4 billion into
next-generation technology in the Defence Space
Portfolio across the next 10 years.
The contract to build the
satellite has been awarded through the Serapis
Lot 2 commercial framework, run by Dstl in
collaboration with BAE Systems. The framework
aims to reach non-traditional defence suppliers,
small and medium-sized enterprises, and academia
to develop new capabilities with the space
domain.