Harris Corp. proposes GOES-R satellite ground segment solution, bids for prime contract

Feb. 12, 2009
MELBOURNE, Fla., 12 Feb. 2009. Harris Corp., an international communications and information technology company, delivered its proposal for a total, end-to-end solution for the ground segment of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R Series program. The ground segment includes receiving and processing satellite data, generating and distributing products from the data, and the command-and-control of operational satellites.

MELBOURNE, Fla., 12 Feb. 2009.Harris Corp., an international communications and information technology company, delivered its proposal for a total, end-to-end solution for the ground segment of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R Series (GOES-R) program.

The ground segment includes receiving and processing satellite data, generating and distributing products from the data, and the command-and-control of operational satellites.

GOES satellites are a primary tool currently used by NOAA to detect and track hurricanes, thunderstorms, tornadoes, and other severe weather in the continental United States and the western hemisphere. The satellites provide the images and time-lapse sequences familiar to most Americans in television weather forecasts.

GOES-R advanced sensor technology will measure data such as solar activity, the charged particle environment, the Earth's magnetic field, temperature and moisture profiles, cloud properties, ozone estimates, and solar x-ray flux to support accurate weather forecasting, severe storm tracking, and meteorological research

The Harris team's service-based, open-architecture solution for GOES-R is a flexible, end-to-end system that accommodates the anticipated 40-times increase in data that will be ingested, processed, and distributed to more than 10,000 direct users, while allowing for continuous improvement and future expansion as the GOES-R mission evolves. The company is offering a low-risk, high-technology solution that has been prototyped and displayed in the GOES-R lab in Melbourne, Fla.

"Severe weather conditions are one of the most persistent and destructive forces our country faces," says Frank Misciasci, Harris senior executive account manager. "The Harris solution provides NOAA and other weather professionals the ability to decipher, predict, and relay impending weather threats at an unprecedented speed and accuracy to first responders and the public at large. We're able to do this because we've been involved in the metrological-satellite ground system business since there was such a business."

Harris is bidding the GOES-R program as prime contractor and systems integrator. Members of the Harris GOES-R pursuit team include Atmospheric and Environmental Research Inc., Boeing Mission Systems, Carr Astronautics, Honeywell Technology Solutions, Wyle Information Systems LLC, and Applied Research and Engineering Sciences.

Award of the contract is expected in the spring of 2009, with the first launch of a GOES-R series satellite scheduled for 2015.

Following development and deployment of the ground segment, Harris IT Services will provide operations and support services over the 10-year contract with the opportunity to provide operations and support services over the life of the GOES-R program, through 2029, says a representative.

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