BAE Systems wins $15 million sensor contract with U.S. Air Force

Feb. 5, 2008
LEXINGTON, Mass., 5 Feb. 2008. BAE Systems has won a $15 million contract to develop advanced infrared focal-plane arrays (FPAs) for U.S. Air Force missile defense surveillance satellites. This contract is part of the Air Force Research Laboratory's High Stare program, a five-year project to develop high-performance, large-format, shortwave infrared FPAs for Air Force missile-warning satellites.

LEXINGTON, Mass., 5 Feb. 2008.BAE Systems has won a $15 million contract to develop advanced infrared focal-plane arrays (FPAs) for U.S. Air Force missile defense surveillance satellites.

This contract is part of the Air Force Research Laboratory's High Stare program, a five-year project to develop high-performance, large-format, shortwave infrared FPAs for Air Force missile-warning satellites.

"This order will enable our semiconductor foundry to produce larger, more sensitive, and more efficient focal-plane arrays that address critical military needs in the areas of missile defense and battlespace characterization," says Paul LoVecchio, director of advanced FPA products for BAE Systems. "These advanced FPAs will help reduce the complexity, weight, and power -- and ultimately, cost -- of future missile defense satellites."

The arrays developed under this program will serve as the eyes for future missile warning satellites. The FPAs will absorb infrared radiation and convert it into electrons to form an image. Large-format arrays will enable future missile defense systems to instantaneously see a larger portion of the earth using a less complex system than the current one.

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