Networks & Digital Warfare

Space Development Agency eyes laser link between different contractors’ birds

“I describe PWSA, the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture, as the Android model,” said Space Development Agency director Derek Tournear. “If we get vendor lock, if only one works, or if they can't talk to each other, that falls apart pretty quickly.”

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A trail of a group of SpaceX’s Starlink satellites passing over Uruguay.  (Photo by MARIANA SUAREZ/AFP via Getty Images)

AFA 2024 — As of this weekend, York Space Systems has gotten the laser communications system working on their recently launched satellites for the Space Force’s nascent Low Earth Orbit network, the director of the Space Development Agency said this morning. The next step, Derek Tournear told reporters, is to get York’s satellites linked by laser to SpaceX’s birds.

The two contractors have gotten their tech to connect successfully in extensive, rigorous tests on the ground, he said, which gives him confidence that they can now make it work in space. But it really had better work, because the stakes are make-or-break for SDA’s ambitious Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA).

“I’m excited to report that, over the weekend, York was able to get optical communication networking working on their satellites,” Tournear told reporters. “Now we have both a set of transport satellites and a set of tracking satellites with the optical connectivity.”

“The next step on that, obviously, is to have the York and SpaceX satellites talk to one another and form a complete mesh network,” he said. “It’s critical that it works.”

Why so serious? “The whole idea” of PWSA, he said, is to move away from traditional Pentagon “stovepipes,” where different government agencies and armed services hire different contractors to build different systems using different protocols that can’t share data without elaborate kludges or painstaking manual re-entry. Instead, PWSA is meant to use what’s known as open architecture, where everything can talk to everything else and any company can plug-and-play its products as long as they meet certain common standards.

This kind of seamless machine-to-machine exchange of data is critical to the Pentagon’s emerging global battle network, known as CJADC2. In more civilian terms, PWSA’s open architecture is meant to function a lot like the app store on a smart phone – except it (a) includes hardware, not just software, and (b) has to work in wartime while hurtling through space at just under five miles per second.

“I describe PWSA, the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture, as the Android model, right?” Tournear explained. As the government, he said, “we endorse interfaces and standards between them, we set up a test bed, [specifically] our optical test bed that’s at Naval Research Laboratory, [where] vendors have to bring their equipment, plug it into NRL, and show that they can talk to the gold standard – the government gold standard – as well as the other vendors to make sure all that works.”

As long as a company’s tech meets the compatibility standards so it works when plugged in to the wider network, Tournear emphasized, the government doesn’t care how it works or need to know any sensitive trade secrets, a perennial sticking point in Pentagon IT contracts.

“We don’t care what’s in the black box behind that interface,” he said. “The whole point of this PSWA [approach] is to build up a market, where we have multiple vendors to keep the price low [and] keep the innovation pushing forward. So if we get vendor lock, if only one works, or if they can’t talk to each others, that falls apart pretty quickly.”

Tournear said he is confident the tech will work on orbit, because it’s been tested so thoroughly on the ground. “I deem this pretty low risk is because that has been where the focus of most of our systems engineering has been day to day,” he said. “That’s why we have forced them to go to NRL, to demonstrate this interoperability, to make sure it all works.”

“Obviously you want to make sure,” he said. “But I think that the risk that it actually fails is pretty low.”

York expressed confidence in a statement to Breaking Defense. “We are proud to contribute to the SDA’s vision for a secure, low-latency global communications architecture,” CEO Dirk Wallinger said through a spokesperson. “Looking ahead, York is fully prepared for the next step of demonstrating interoperability with SpaceX.”

(SpaceX did not respond to Breaking Defense’s request for comment.)

Assuming the laser link does work as planned, Tournear has an ambitious schedule to build out the network of numerous (aka “proliferated”) Low Earth Orbit satellites for a wide range of missions. The initial set of PWSA satellites now on orbit is called Tranche 0, and while relatively few, he said, they’re demonstrating the core capabilities all work.

On the communications side, those capabilities include not only laser links — both satellite to satellite and space to ground — but also the traditional and internationally ubiquitous Link-16 protocol, which uses radio waves. “One hundred percent of our links work” for Link-16, Tournear said. “We’ve demonstrated that a lot of different platforms, including aircraft [on the deck of] aircraft carriers at sea. All that works.”

Tranche 0 surveillance satellites have also successfully tracked an array of real-world events, from missile launches to the SpaceX Starship’s reentry. “We demonstrated that with our first set of launches, the SpaceX birds with the Leidos sensors,” Tournear said. “We expect the L3Harris birds with the L3Harris sensors to be online and collecting data later, probably in early October.”

Overall, “Tranche 0 is an unmitigated success,” Tournear exulted. “We’ve been able to check out all the boxes that we needed to prove the concept works, and then Tranche One with approximately 160 satellites — that will all be launched next year — will actually make this operational.”

After that, “Tranche 2, obviously, is in build,” he went on. “[For] Tranche 3, we passed the Warfighter Council, which is the body we use to vet all requirements. … We expect the solicitation for the integrator portion of that later this year, with the satellite solicitations to go out early next year, so we can get Tranche 3 ready to launch by the end of calendar year ’28.”

 

Updated 9:45 am Tuesday with comment from York Space Systems. Updated 10:40 am to correct that the Link-16 demonstration was with aircraft on a carrier rather than in flight.

PHOTOS: AFA 2024

PHOTOS: AFA 2024

The Israeli firm Rafael came to AFA 2024, here displaying its ice Breaker "5th-gen long-range autonomous precision strike weapon system." (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Elta, a subsidiary of Israeli firm IAI, displayed the ELL-8222SB, an airborne electronic jamming pod, at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
Air, Space & Cyber Conference. Keynote Address: One Air Force. Gen. David W. Allvin, Chief of Staff of the Air Force. September 16, 2024. (Mike Tsukamoto/ Air & Space Forces Magazine)
This curious contraption at one end of the AFA 2024 hall is Resonant Sciences's RAZR, a "high performing, fieldable, robotic system for close-range multi-spectral measurments of aircraft and aircraft components such as radomes, surfaces and edges," the company says. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)
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Anduril's Barracuda family of munitions at the company's stand at AFA 2024. (Brendon Smith / Breaking Defense)