Author: Mary-Louise Hoffman|| Date Published: May 28, 2021
Raytheon Technologies (NYSE: RTX) and Millennium Space Systems have received separate contracts to create digital models of sensor technology for the U.S. Space Force’s future missile warning satellite constellation.
USSF intends to assess Next-Gen OPIR sensor designs against missile tracking requirements as part of the effort.
Col. Timothy Sejba, program executive officer for space development at SMC, said the prototype effort represents the first initiative under an other transaction agreement with Space Enterprise Consortium the service branch unveiled on Jan. 15 and serves as a key element of the center’s digital engineering strategy.
Sejba added that the project supports what the service branch calls a “try it before you buy it” contracting approach.
The Naval Information Warfare Center Pacific is soliciting proposals for the development and fielding of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems…
The Department of War is accelerating its push into unmanned systems, moving beyond experimentation toward large-scale production, streamlined acquisition and…
BAE Systems has received a $117.7 million contract modification from the U.S. Navy to support depot-level modernization, maintenance and repair of USS…
Advanced wireless infrastructure is becoming as strategically important as artificial intelligence in modern defense operations 5G standalone enables network slicing,…