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AeroAstro to Increase Piggyback Launch Opportunities
NRO Contract for Design of Standardized Piggyback Payload Accommodations
to Further Reduce the Cost of Access to Space
Herndon,
VA – July 31, 2000
AeroAstro, Inc., the world's premier small satellite technology
company, today announced a flexible template being designed
for small satellite secondary launch slots to reduce mission
cycle time and increase the flexibility and frequency of available
secondary launch opportunities. This Universal Secondary Payload
Interface (USPI) will be funded through a $300,000 contract
from the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office (NRO).
A
few of the major launch vehicles with extra lift capacity
to be covered include the Ariane 5, Delta II, EELV, and the
Space Shuttle, so that a small satellite designed with USPI
could ideally be flown into orbit quickly and efficiently
on any of these or other launch vehicles.
Dr.
Rick Fleeter, President and CEO of AeroAstro, said, "Access
to space is key to the successful use of miniature spacecraft,
and AeroAstro is focused on ways to exploit existing capabilities
for low-cost rapid launch. USPI delivers cheaper access to
space in the present timeframe and enables further progress
towards the ideal of launch-on-demand. In combination with
AeroAstro's SPORT orbit transfer system to move piggyback
satellites into their desired orbits, USPI further enhances
the utility of small spacecraft in a variety of time- and
budget-critical missions."
Launch
costs and the time required for integration, test and qualification
will all be reduced. USPI will provide mechanical and electrical
interfaces, a semi-standard payload envelope and a universal
adapter design that is intended to be valid for a number of
launch vehicles.
USPI
will also standardize and streamline launch vehicle manifesting
for small satellite mission planners, thereby providing maximum
flexibility for small spacecraft missions.
AeroAstro's
SPORT (Small Payload ORbital Transfer) system, currently being
developed in-house, will be fully compatible with USPI, enabling
a variety of launch vehicles to offer small satellite delivery
to a specific orbit even when launched as secondary payload
customers. Arianespace of Evry, France, the provider of the
Ariane 4 and 5 launch vehicles, has already signed an agreement
with AeroAstro to work together to offer the SPORT system
to qualified customers.
USPI
and SPORT will also assist ride-brokering by offering flexibility
in spacecraft design no matter what the ultimate launch vehicle
selection.
AeroAstro,
a pioneer of micro- and nano-spacecraft applications in science,
remote sensing, and communications, is a leader in innovative
small satellite applications that open the space frontier.
It led the trend towards high technology in miniature satellites
- now the industry standard - with its highly successful ALEXIS
satellite begun in 1988 and currently in its seventh year
operating on-orbit.
AeroAstro
is now leading the way to a new age of commercial space with
flexible tools that enable users to benefit from unprecedented
access to space systems. AeroAstro has designed, constructed,
tested and supported the launch of several small satellites.
It has delivered numerous spacecraft design programs and manufactures
low-cost small rocket engines, micro-satellites and spacecraft
components. NASA, the Air Force, and commercial and university
customers have all employed AeroAstro throughout its 12-year
history.
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