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Overview
The goal of the Orbital Express Space Operations Architecture program is to
validate the technical feasibility of robotic, autonomous onorbit refueling
and reconfiguration of satellites to support a broad range of future U.S.
national security and commercial space programs. Refueling satellites
will enable frequent maneuver to improve coverage, change arrival times
to counter denial and deception and improve survivability, as well as
extend satellite lifetime. Electronics upgrades on-orbit can provide regular
performance improvements and dramatically reduce the time to deploy new
technology on-orbit. The Orbital Express advanced technology demonstration
will design, develop and test on-orbit a prototype servicing satellite
(ASTRO) and a surrogate next generation serviceable satellite (NextSat).
The elements of the Orbital Express demonstration, coordinated with Air
Force Space Command and Air Force Space and Missile Command, will be tied
together by non-proprietary satellite servicing interfaces (mechanical,
electrical, etc.) that will facilitate the development of an industry
wide on-orbit servicing infrastructure. NASA will apply the sensors and
software developed for autonomous rendezvous and proximity operations
to reduce risk for collaborative human-robotic operations in space for
the NASA Exploration Initiative. Launch of the demonstration system is
scheduled for March 7, 2007 on the Air Force Space Test Program STP-1
mission.
- Video of the global mated survey of the two
spacecraft by the arm camera, March 28, 2007. The video was created from
1,600 still pictures taken by the camera.
Video (24MB .mpeg format)
- Orbital Express On-orbit pictures
(March 30, 2007)
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