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Tag: Space Force

  • 3 questions with Chief Master Sgt. John Bentivegna of the US Space Force

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    Sep. 5—When most people walk into a room and flip a switch, they expect lights to come on without giving much thought to where that electricity is coming from, said U.S. Space Force Chief Master Sgt. John Bentivegna.

    The same is true for the countless everyday conveniences that rely on space-based technology.

    “Everything from the GPS constellation to the finance industry, the transportation industry, the agricultural industry, those of us who have dish networks so we can watch the NFL and all the things — those are all space-related capabilities, and you just assume they’re always going to be there,” said Bentivegna, who visited Kirtland Air Force Base this week.

    Established in 2019 during President Donald Trump’s first term, the Space Force’s purpose is to organize, train and equip forces protecting U.S. interests in space. The newest — and now sixth — branch of the U.S. Armed Forces has six different bases throughout Florida, Colorado and California, according to its website.

    In New Mexico, the military branch also has a presence at KAFB with its Space Rapid Capabilities Office, which develops and delivers “operationally dominant space capabilities at the speed of warfighting relevance,” according to the Kirtland website.

    Bentivegna, who assumed the role in 2023, wants people to understand that “space is closer than you think.”

    “Space actually starts just 62 miles above us. When you think about how far you drive to go to a restaurant or visit a friend, you may be going 62 miles or more,” he said.

    What do Space Force operations look like right now in New Mexico?

    I have been wearing a uniform for over 31 years, and this is actually my first opportunity to visit Kirtland and visit the space entities, specifically, that are doing amazing work down here. It’s actually been an exciting few days for me to finally get a chance in-person to meet the men and women that are doing some of the amazing experimentation, innovation and research and development that’s here.

    So, primarily from the Space Force service perspective, what’s here is Space Systems Command and the Air Force Research Lab, both entities that work on research development, acquisition. (That) is a lot of the work that’s being done here for the Space Force. What are the capabilities and technologies that we’re going to need tomorrow and into the future? It’s the men and women here who are helping make that a reality.

    Do you see New Mexico’s role in Space Force operations developing further?

    I think there’s already discussions about a few more organizations that are either not established yet, that will be established here in Kirtland, in New Mexico, or we are moving some organizations possibly to New Mexico to consolidate where the brain trust is.

    This is the mecca, if you will, for some of the brighter minds to work on what the service will look like in the future, so we’re trying to take advantage of the community that’s here (in) New Mexico. I do anticipate additional opportunities for guardians (the name for Space Force service members), mission sets to move here.

    The Space Force today, at the end of the fiscal year, when you take into account our military and civilians — we’re only about 16,000 strong, so we’re still a relatively very small service. When we talk about moving organizations from one base to another or standing up a new unit, sometimes we’re talking numbers in the dozens, maybe 100. Unlike some of the other services, (where) it could be in numbers of the thousands.

    Can you explain what the ‘space corridor’ is?

    I’ll be honest, that’s the first time I’ve heard that term. But I will say, when you think about space from a war-fighting perspective, and as a war fighter myself, I do spend a lot of time focused on the joint fight and our ability to secure the domain, protect and defend what we have here. When you think about the economic impact that space brings to the United States, like space tourism, space cargo, the amount of money that we benefit, and the quality of life that space brings to us, having a robust space infrastructure, space industry within the United States outside the Department of Defense is very valuable.

    If there is a space corridor, especially when you start talking about more commercial and exploration, that excites me. I think there’s unlimited opportunity and potential to get there. Our role as guardians is just to ensure that there’s freedom of access, so that if investors want to explore, they have the ability to do that with no one standing in their way.

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  • SpaceX launch overnight: Everything to know about Starlink launch from Cape Canaveral, Florida

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    Insomniacs and night owls, take note: SpaceX is targeting a Thursday early morning four-hour window to launch a Falcon 9 rocket from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.

    This window extends from 1:27 a.m. to 5:27 a.m. The Falcon 9 will climb to the northeast from pad 39A and deploy a payload of 28 Starlink internet satellites into low-Earth orbit.

    The Space Force’s 45th Weather Squadron predicted 85% odds of “go for launch” weather, with cumulus clouds pushing in from the Gulf Stream posing the sole threat.

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    No Brevard County sonic booms should occur. Rather, the rocket's first-stage booster will target landing aboard a SpaceX drone ship out at sea about eight minutes after liftoff.

    Check back for live FLORIDA TODAY Space Team launch coverage updates on this page, starting about 90 minutes before the launch window opens. When SpaceX's live webcast begins about five minutes before liftoff, we’ll post it below next to our countdown clock.

    Cape Canaveral: Is there a launch today? Upcoming NASA, SpaceX, ULA rocket launch schedule at Cape Canaveral

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    For the latest news and launch schedule from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and NASA's Kennedy Space Center, visit floridatoday.com/space. Another easy way: Click here to sign up for our weekly Space newsletter.

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    Rick Neale is a Space Reporter at FLORIDA TODAY. Contact Neale at Rneale@floridatoday.com. Twitter/X: @RickNeale1

    Space is important to us and that's why we're working to bring you top coverage of the industry and Florida launches. Journalism like this takes time and resources. Please support it with a subscription here.

    This article originally appeared on Florida Today: SpaceX rocket launch overnight: What to know before liftoff from Florida

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  • NASA, Blue Origin Prepare for New Glenn Launch of Mars Mission

    NASA, Blue Origin Prepare for New Glenn Launch of Mars Mission

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    NASA and Blue Origin are preparing for the agency’s ESCAPADE (Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers) mission, which begins on the inaugural launch of the company’s New Glenn rocket.

    The mission will study the solar wind’s interaction with the magnetosphere on Mars.

    Blue Origin is targeting no earlier than Sunday, October 13th, for the launch of New Glenn-1 from Space Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Central Florida.

    The ESCAPADE mission will use two identical spacecraft to investigate how the solar wind interacts with the hybrid magnetosphere on Mars and how this interaction drives the planet’s atmospheric escape.

    ESCAPADE is the first multi-spacecraft orbital science mission to the Red Planet. Its twin orbiters will take simultaneous observations from different locations around Mars. According to NASA, the observations will reveal the planet’s real-time response to space weather and how the Martian magnetosphere changes over time.

    The mission is funded by NASA’s Heliophysics Division and is part of the NASA Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration program.

    The ESCAPADE mission is led by the University of California, Berkeley’s Space Sciences Laboratory, and the spacecraft is designed by Rocket Lab. The agency’s Launch Services Program, based at NASA Kennedy, secured the launch service under the VADR (Venture-class Acquisition of Dedicated and Rideshare) contract.

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  • Artel, LLC Delivered the Final Pathfinder 2 Milestone, Initial on-Orbit Test

    Artel, LLC Delivered the Final Pathfinder 2 Milestone, Initial on-Orbit Test

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    It has now been a year since Artel, LLC launched its Pathfinder 2 program, which has now completed its first six months of on-orbit operations for the United Space. Pathfinder 2 originally completed its final contractual milestone, the Initial on-orbit Test (IoT) in September 2023, which the U.S. Government accepted, completing all program requirements. This included the design, test, launch, and operation of the satellite and transponder, as well as to provide commercial communications Ku-band bandwidth for 15 years. 

    Pathfinder 2 is an initiative between Congress and the United States Space Force (USSF), formally the US Air Force’s Space Command, to move from short-term lease agreements towards long-term investment opportunities for commercial satellite communications (SATCOM). The vision was to host a government owned transponder onboard a commercially owned and operated satellite. Artel was awarded the $19 Million contract on 9 November 2017 to embed the Pathfinder 2 mission on Hispasat’s Amazonas Nexus high throughput satellite, built by Thales Alenia Space. The Pathfinder 2 mission launched in February 2023. This new satellite has coverage over the entire American continent and the North Atlantic corridor (an area with major aerial and maritime traffic). 

    A unique objective was to ensure greater satellite services and introduce cost savings as compared to the traditional short-term space capacity leasing model of the commercial satellites in orbit. For the Pathfinder 2 mission, the Government purchased commercial capacity for 2023-2038 including management of the capacity with no annual sustainment costs. The long-term spend, as an alternative to short-term leasing options, was key to the substantial 70% cost savings. 

    The U.S. Government owns this capacity for the lifespan of the satellite, which is typically 15 years. This capacity can be used for the DoD or any Federal agency, at the U.S. Government’s discretion. Since completing IoT, the Space Force’s Space Delta 8 SATCOM Office at Peterson Space Force Base, Colorado has been responsible for planning mission support and managing the Pathfinder 2 capacity for a full array of DoD users. Remarkably, demand for this capacity has been so strong, as of February 2024 it is almost fully utilized.   

    “This mission demonstrates the high degree of partnership between military and commercial acquisition. Pathfinder 2 satisfies warfighter requirements by procuring commercially provided pre-launch transponders and securing bandwidth at a lower total ownership cost,” said Ms. Charlotte Gerhart, Senior Materiel Leader, Acquisition Delta – Tactical SATCOM, Space Systems Command.

    Pathfinder 2 resulted in immediate savings to the government, when on 26 September 2023 at 1600Z, General Atomic’s MQ-1C transitioned to Pathfinder 2 after 20 years of leasing SATCOM capacity one year at a time—or less. Joint Task Force-North (JTF-N) was procuring SATCOM for its mission at an annualized cost of $1.8 million. As a result of Pathfinder 2, their new cost for SATCOM is $0.0. Additionally, Pathfinder 2 also enables industry collaboration between commercial SATCOM capabilities with military SATCOM (MILSATCOM) operations. 

    “The Pathfinder 2 Program is a prime example of Government and Industry collaboration to not only deliver leading-edge technologies, but also through a purchase model saving substantial taxpayer dollars,” stated Ed Spitler, Head of SATCOM Programs for Artel, LLC. Artel, and its partners, were able to overcome several unforeseen challenges during these past five years related to events from the global pandemic to the war in Ukraine. While the world was experiencing supply chain interruptions, product shortages, and facility shut-downs, Artel led the way to persevere and deliver. Pathfinder 2 represents a departure from traditional segregation of military and commercial SATCOM management processes, placing both under the management of the USSF.

    EL SEGUNDO, Calif. – Space Systems Command (SSC) 

    About Space Systems Command

    Space Systems Command (SSC) is the U.S. Space Force field command responsible for acquiring and delivering resilient war fighting capabilities to protect our nation’s strategic advantage in and from space. SSC manages an $15 billion space acquisition budget for the Department of Defense and works in partnership with joint forces, industry, government agencies, academic and allied organizations to accelerate innovation and outpace emerging threats. Our actions today are making the world a better space for tomorrow.

    -30-

    Media representatives can submit questions for response regarding this topic by sending an 

    e-mail to sscpa.media@spaceforce.mil

    About Artel

    Since 1986, Artel has served as a trusted provider of secure IT and network solutions to the U.S. Government. Our telecommunications offerings ensure reliable, secure connectivity worldwide to support our customers’ mission-critical requirements. An International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 9001:2015 certified network systems integrator, Artel provides cost-effective, on-time delivery of global terrestrial and satellite network communication services, cyber security, risk management, and technology support services. Please visit www.artelllc.com for additional information. If you would like more information about this topic, please e-mail espitler@artelllc.com

    Source: Artel LLC

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  • New Approach Paves the Future of Commercial Space Launch

    New Approach Paves the Future of Commercial Space Launch

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    For the first time, two launch service providers have agreed to simultaneously operate from a single launch complex. Phantom COO Mark Lester and Vaya COO Rob Fabian signed the memorandum of agreement at the Space Mobility Conference, outlining how the two companies will work concurrently at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s Launch Complex 13 (LC-13). 

    Commercial companies sharing a Launch Complex is a novel approach to maximize limited launch-site availability at the Cape. Historically, one company would exclusively occupy a Launch Complex and populate it with unique and proprietary infrastructure dedicated to its use. While this approach was satisfactory when available launch sites were plentiful and few launch vehicles existed, it is not sustainable in the rapidly growing and diverse commercial space launch environment.

    In addition to maximizing available land use, Phantom and Vaya’s approach provides significant national security advantages through responsive and resilient launch. The ability for multiple companies to share infrastructure and launch support systems in a nimble manner dramatically increases launch pad throughput and launch resilience to provide assured access to space. This approach leverages proven airport models where runways, taxiways, gates, and operational infrastructure are company-agnostic shared resources.

    “Vaya Space and Phantom value the importance of collaboration to create new responsive launch capability in a safe and efficient manner for long-term growth and sustainability. We have worked diligently together over the last several months on the agreement to underscore our commitment to safety and best address and balance government, spaceport, and company needs,” stated Phantom COO Mark Lester. 

    About Vaya Space 

    Vaya Space is a privately owned company based on the Space Coast and leveraging patented Vortex Hybrid engine technology to disrupt the Space and Defense markets. For media inquiries, please contact media@vayaspace.com

    About Phantom Space

    Founded by inventors and entrepreneurs Jim Cantrell and Michael D’Angelo, Phantom Space Corporation is a space transportation company democratizing space access by mass manufacturing launch vehicles, satellites, and space propulsion systems. Phantom’s vision is to become the “Henry Ford of Space Transportation” through the opportunity to mass manufacture and launch hundreds of rockets — a 100% U.S.-controlled-and-operated enterprise headquartered in Tucson, Arizona, with multiple launch operations centers. Learn more at https://www.phantomspace.com/

    Contact:
    Jim Cantrell, CEO
    (520) 207-2799
    pr@phantomspace.com

    Source: Vaya Space

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  • a.i. solutions® Awarded $217 Million Prototype Operations I (POPS-I) Contract to Support U.S. Space Force

    a.i. solutions® Awarded $217 Million Prototype Operations I (POPS-I) Contract to Support U.S. Space Force

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    Space mission engineering services provider and space software applications developer will support U.S. Space Force over a 5-year contract.

    Press Release


    May 31, 2022

    a.i. solutions® announces that it has been awarded a Small Business Set-Aside Prime Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (IDIQ) contract with Firm-Fixed-Price (FFP), Cost-Plus-Award-Fee (CPAF) with a value of $217 million to provide on-console satellite operations support for the U.S. Space Force, Space Systems Command’s Innovation and Prototyping Delta (SSC/SZI).

    The Prototype Operations I (POPS-I) is a procurement for research and development satellite operations and support services for SSC/SZI. The goal of the Innovation and Prototyping Delta is to accelerate mission design and integration, launch operations, and ground system test support to provide reliable, low-cost access to space. 

    The contract awarded under the Department of Defense, U.S. Space Force’s Space Systems Command has a performance period of five (5) years with two (2) additional one-year options. POPS-I will provide on-console and technical support for concept development, readiness, launch, on-orbit testing and evaluation, operations, and analysis activities for research and experimental satellites.

    “Winning this prime contract, our first with the Space Force, is a testament to the dedication and commitment of our team,” said Robert Sperling, a.i. solutions’ President and CEO. “We are excited to bring our 25 years’ experience of successfully supporting space missions to deliver satellite operations expertise and proven innovation technologies while ensuring uninterrupted, ongoing mission support.”

    The a.i. solutions team, which includes Actalent, Boecore, Parsons, KBR, and LinQuest, will perform the work at Kirtland Air Force Base, NM and at Schriever Space Force Base, CO.

    About a.i. solutions

    Founded in 1996, a.i. solutions provides an engaged workforce that delivers innovative products and services that enable access to space and ensure national security. a.i. solutions’ services and products span mission engineering and technology, mission systems assurance, launch services, FreeFlyer® astrodynamics software, and other customizable space software applications. For additional information, please visit ai-solutions.com and check out @ai_sol on Twitter.

    ###

    Press Contact

    Doug Stewart

    Appleton Creative, Inc.

    Ph: (407) 246-0092 Ext. 1

    Email: doug@appletoncreative.com

    Source: a.i. solutions

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