Lockheed Martin to integrate missile warning onto EGS via FORGE

Sept. 17, 2020
Lockheed Martin is the prime contractor for the Space Force’s Next Gen OPIR Block 0 GEO satellites, which will provide improved missile warning capabilities that are more survivable and resilient against emerging threats.

BOULDER, Colo., - The Space Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center awarded a $51.2 million contract on Aug. 3, 2020 to Lockheed Martin to architect, design, develop, integrate, test and validate the Geosynchronous (GEO) Non-Integrated Tactical Warning and Attack Assessment (ITWAA) Ops Migration to Enterprise Ground Services (EGS) (GNOME) mission software onto the next-generation Enterprise Ground System (EGS).

GNOME will integrate Mission Management and Telemetry, Tracking, and Commanding (TT&C) for the Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS) GEO 5 or GEO 6 satellite onto the EGS framework, as well as serve as a command and control (C2) pathfinder for the follow-on Next Generation Overhead Persistent Infrared (OPIR) satellites.

GNOME will be rapidly developed and integrated using Agile software methodologies, which have a proven track record over a decade for many Lockheed Martin Space customers. Agile lets us deliver iterative features and fix bugs as we go. It dramatically improves the software engineering quality and delivery timelines while avoiding cost overruns that previous software delivery models sometimes face.

Lockheed Martin has worked in tandem with the U.S. military as its lead missile warning mission integrator for the past 20 years. The company has designed and launched four SBIRS GEO missile warning satellites; is modernizing the design of the SBIRS GEO 5/6 spacecrafts to provide more resiliency and efficiency; is developing Block 0 of the Next Generation OPIR GEO missile warning satellites, and has served as lead sustainment and operations contractor.

Lockheed Martin is the prime contractor for the Space Force’s Next Gen OPIR Block 0 GEO satellites, which will provide improved missile warning capabilities that are more survivable and resilient against emerging threats. The U.S. Department of the Air Force implemented Next Gen OPIR as a rapid acquisition program in 2018. Lockheed Martin recently completed successful preliminary design reviews for two potential advanced sensor payload providers for the new system as well as successfully completing a similar review on ground systems.

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