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AeroAstro Awarded Contracts for Star Tracker and
Integrated Avionics Module Development
Ashburn,
VA – October 16, 2002
AeroAstro,
Inc., a leading small satellite technology company, was recently
awarded two Department of Defense Small Business Technology
Transfer (STTR) contracts. Under contract through the Air
Force Research Laboratory (Air Force Materiel Command), and
in partnership with the University of Alabama in Huntsville
(UAH), AeroAstro will develop an integrated avionics module
for short-duration missions. In partnership with the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) Space Systems Laboratory (SSL),
AeroAstro will develop a lightweight, inexpensive, low-power
star tracker for small satellites, under contract to the Missile
Defense Agency (contractual support through the Naval Surface
Warfare Center, Dahlgren Division). AeroAstro is already planning
to leverage each of these technology development efforts to
the benefit of several on-going and upcoming satellite programs.
Today’s
star trackers are too massive, expensive, and power hungry
to appropriately serve small maneuverable satellites. However,
lower-impact technologies, such as sun sensors, do not offer
the flexibility and performance required for advanced mission
profiles. AeroAstro and the MIT SSL are developing a star
tracker to better serve the needs of small satellites by using
CMOS technology and innovative optics, balancing accuracy
with power consumption, mass, and cost.
AeroAstro,
in partnership with the University of Alabama in Huntsville
(UAH), is developing a compact, highly versatile avionics
core with a design that can be used across a wide variety
of small satellite designs, focusing on short-duration missions,
with a low recurring cost. While varying applications require
unique spacecraft solutions, there are many similarities in
basic avionics requirements that can be leveraged for a significant
overall cost savings. This project aims to eliminate reliance
on mission-specific buses, but without incurring the costs
inherent in the universal bus approach.
Dr.
Rick Fleeter, AeroAstro’s President and CEO, said, “Winning
these STTR technology development contracts demonstrates AeroAstro’s
ability to work closely with universities and other research
organizations to develop innovative technologies for next-generation
space applications. It is already clear that these technologies
have strong commercial potential, as demonstrated by their
rapid incorporation into spacecraft programs, such as the
SHERPA space tug, currently in early stages of development
at AeroAstro.”
Along
with the Air Force Research Laboratory Space Vehicles Directorate
(AFRL/VSSV) and other key Air Force funded technologies, AeroAstro
is developing SHERPA (SHuttle Expendable Rocket for Payload
Augmentation), a lightweight, modular, and reliable orbit
transfer system for Shuttle Hitchhiker Experiment Launch System
(SHELS) launched assets. SHERPA will perform multiple orbit
changes, station-keeping, and/or deorbiting. AeroAstro’s
role in this program is as the spacecraft designer/builder
and prime integrator for all necessary technologies, leveraging
several other AeroAstro developments. The star tracker and
integrated avionics module are key technologies currently
baselined on the SHERPA vehicle.
AeroAstro,
a pioneer of micro and nanospacecraft applications in science,
remote sensing, and communications, is a leader in innovative
small satellite applications that open the space frontier
to a larger and more varied constituency. It led the trend
towards smaller, faster, better, and cheaper spacecraft æ
which became NASA's mantra æ with its highly successful
ALEXIS satellite begun in 1988 and currently in its ninth
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 technology. AeroAstro has designed, constructed,
tested, and supported the launch of small satellites for universities,
NASA, and the DoD. The company has successfully developed
numerous innovative spacecraft systems tailored for small,
low-cost space missions, including radios, power management
and storage, computing, attitude determination and control,
and innovative structures. AeroAstro manufactures low-cost
satellite systems and components, used in its own spacecraft
and for spacecraft development in the US and abroad.
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