Ball Aerospace joins military internet space project to speed communications among land, sea, and air

Aug. 10, 2020
Project seeks to move data seamlessly among fixed and mobile operating locations using high-bandwidth beyond-line-of-sight space communications.

WRIGHT-PATTERSON AFB, Ohio – Space communications experts at Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. in Boulder, Colo., are joining a U.S. Air Force research project to find new ways to distribute information among land, sea, and air forces quickly to support high-speed decision-making.

Officials of the Air Force Research Laboratory at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, announced a $9.7 million contract to Ball on Thursday for the Defense Experimentation Using the Commercial Space Internet (DEUCSI) program.

Ball Aerospace joins L3Harris Technologies Communication Systems-West in Salt Lake City and the Northrop Grumman Technology Services segment in Herndon, Va., for the DEUCSI Call 002 vendor flexibility effort. L3Harris and Northrop Grumman won their contracts last December.

This project seeks the ability to move and share data seamlessly among a wide variety of fixed and mobile operating locations using constantly available, high-bandwidth, beyond-line-of-sight communications.

Related: Air Force moves forward with path-agnostic communications using space internet for high-speed decision-making

This new space-based capability will be called path-agnostic communications because its users will be able to communicate reliably to any location in the world without explicitly specifying which nodes of a communication network to use.

Ball Aerospace, L3Harris, and Northrop Grumman will seek to establish the ability to communicate with Air Force and other military platforms via several different commercial space internet constellations using common user terminal hardware elements.

The vision for path-agnostic communications is becoming possible due to the burgeoning commercial space internet, Air Force officials say. Several commercial companies plan to establish space internet constellations consisting of hundreds to thousands of satellites, each to create global internet services.

The Defense Experimentation Using the Commercial Space Internet program seeks to establish resilient, high-bandwidth, high-availability Air Force communications and data sharing capabilities by leveraging developing commercial space internet networks.

Related: Air Force to capitalize on growing commercial satellite communications infrastructure for tactical internet

This approach differs radically from traditional military satellite communications programs in which the government typically specifies and funds every aspect of the program, Air Force researchers point out.

Instead, taking advantage of the commercial space internet will concentrate government efforts on the few areas that are unique to Air Force applications.

The project has three phases: establish connectivity between several Air Force sites using commercial demonstration satellites and terminals; expand connectivity to many Air Force assets by proliferating user terminals to several locations and vehicle types; and special experiments to address military-unique requirements not otherwise met by commercial space internet vendors.

For more information contact Ball Aerospace online at www.ball.com/aerospace, L3Harris Communications Systems-West online at www2.l3t.com/csw, Northrop Grumman Technology Services at www.northropgrumman.com, or the Air Force Research Laboratory at www.wpafb.af.mil/afrl.

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Military Aerospace, create an account today!