NGC to Build Long-Life Cryocoolers for Sensors on 2 Weather Satellites
- Advanced ITT Sensors Will Provide Improved Data for Meteorologists
The Northrop Grumman cooler design is based on the flight-proven High Efficiency Cryocooler (HEC) pulse tube cooler and will maintain the international satellites' infrared detectors and optics at cryogenic temperatures for more than 8 years. The ITT sensor payloads will be based on the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) that ITT is currently building for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R-series, or GOES-R, for NOAA's next-generation geostationary constellation. This improved imager has the capability to monitor three times the number of atmospheric events when compared to current generation payloads.
"With 16 cryocoolers now in orbit, two operating continuously for more than 11 years, our heritage cryocoolers and electronics are demonstrating unmatched reliability and performance in space," said Mark Folkman, director of Products and Sensing for Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems. This contract marks the third time a Northrop Grumman cryocooler will have supported an international weather/climate satellite.
A world leader in long life, high-reliability cryocoolers for space applications, Northrop Grumman continues to enable sensor performance for critical weather, climate, and science missions. Since 1998, more than 90% of the U.S. manufactured long-life pulse tube or Stirling cryocoolers in space have been Northrop Grumman-built. Several Northrop Grumman cryocoolers have exceeded their on-orbit performance requirements, in some cases extending mission life beyond 10 years.
"ITT is proud to build meteorological payloads that help save lives and protect property around the world, and we welcome Northrop Grumman to the team that's creating this extraordinary meteorological instrument," said Rob Mitrevski, vice president for Commercial and Space Science programs, ITT Space Systems Division.
Source : Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE:NOC)

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