C4ISR & Networks
Smaller satellites are proving big news for the armed forces.
In November 2013, a Minotaur rocket took 29 satellites into orbit, setting a new record for the most satellites deployed in a single launch. Less than two days later, the record fell to a Dnepr carrying 32 satellites, according to the Aerospace Corp., which conducts R&D for the Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC), a unit of Air Force Space Command.
Since then the satellites have kept getting smaller, opening new operational doors for the military.
Army public affairs predicts tiny satellites may someday deliver voice, data and visual communications in remote areas where they might otherwise be impossible.
This will be a big leap forward. Today, Army radio over-the-horizon communication from the field to higher headquarters can be virtually nonexistent in remote operational areas, said Dr. Travis Taylor, the senior scientist for Space Division, U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command-Tech Center, or SMDC, at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama. He spoke during Lab Day at the Pentagon in May 2015.
Tiny satellites could help to close the gap, he said. He pointed to an effort by Army scientists and researchers to build the SMDC-Orbital Nanosatellite Effect, known as the SMDC-ONE. “It’s basically a cell phone tower in space, except it’s not for cell phones, it’s for Army radios,” Taylor said…