MilitaryStartupsTechnology

DARPA Awards SpaceLink Phase 1 Space-BACN Contract

DARPA, the Pentagon’s high-risk, high-reward R&D arm, has its mind on laser links. The agency is specifically working to develop an interconnected network of links for speedy and secure communications between military, civilian, and commercial space assets. 

The DARPA program, known as the Space-Based Adaptive Communications Node (Space-BACN), recently announced 11 Phase 1 awardees. 

Space-BACN: The Phase 1 Space-BACN awards fall into three technical areas:

  1. Developing a flexible, low-cost optical aperture that meets DARPA’s technical requirements. Mynaric, MBRYONICS, and CACI, Inc. received this award.
  2. Developing a reconfigurable optical modem that can support 100 Gbps on one wavelength. II-VI Aerospace and Defense, Arizona State University, and Intel Federal, LLC won this award.
  3. Identifying the command and control elements that will enable Space-BACN to talk with commercial satellite operators and other constellations. SpaceX, Telesat, SpaceLink, Viasat, and Amazon’s Kuiper received this award.

This morning, SpaceLink, an awardee from the third category, shared a bit of extra color on its role in the program.The McLean, VA-based company is working on a constellation of four MEO optical (aka laser) data relay satellites that will be able to facilitate faster communication with LEO satellites.

“We’ve been living in a dial-up world,” SpaceLink CEO Dave Bettinger told Payload. “We’re at the base of a huge adoption curve.”

SpaceLink’s planned constellation is designed so that it can connect with any satellite in LEO and downlink directly to a ground station. Laser comms are also more secure, since they use a much narrower beam than radio communications and are more difficult to intercept.

  • This is a “natural defense against adversaries being able to jam or listen in” on your signals, Bettinger said.
  • Today, the time between the moment when an operator recognizes they need data and the time it gets to them can be hours, or even days. “With our system, we can bring that down to minutes,” SpaceLink chief strategy and commercial officer Tony Colucci told Payload.

SpaceLink’s system is compatible with the optical comms systems being built by both DARPA and the SDA, aligning the technology with government and military needs.

The upshot: Optical communications are having a moment, as multiple government programs as well as commercial space companies look to increase communication speed and security from orbit. 

Related Stories
BusinessLaunchTechnology

Phantom Space and Ubotica Team Up to Bring AI to Orbit

The volume of data being gathered in space is growing exponentially, and the capacity to ship that data back to Earth is increasingly constrained. That’s why more companies want to analyze their data on orbit. Phantom Space is no different.

Technology

Boeing Hits Key Milestone On Path To Quantum First in Orbit

HRL Labs has built a space-hardened quantum payload and demonstrated it on the ground—a key milestone in Boeing’s push to demonstrate the first quantum entanglement swap in space. The device, which is going through final environmental testing, will serve as a “ground twin” for the final payload, which is expected to reach orbit on the […]

InternationalMilitaryPolaris

NATO Considers Reopening Space Policy Ahead of Schedule

“It’s not supposed to be even touched until 2027. Now they’re saying that’s probably too long. So let’s talk about—is now the time, based on what’s happening in the world,” Col. Jonathan Whitaker told Payload on the sidelines of Space Symposium. 

Military

Derek Tournear Will Return to the SDA’s Helm

Dust off that nameplate: Derek Tournear is taking his corner office back. The former leader of the Space Development Agency (SDA) will return to his old job on April 17, following three months of administrative leave.