ALBUQUERQUE, NM -- (Marketwire) -- 07/30/09 -- EMCORE Corporation (NASDAQ: EMKR), a
leading provider of compound semiconductor-based components and systems for
the fiber optic and solar power markets, today announced an industry team
led by The Boeing Company (NYSE: BA) has received a contract from the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) for work on Phase 2 of
the Fast Access Spacecraft Testbed (FAST) program. The $15.5 million
cost-plus-fixed-fee contract is currently funded to $13.8 million.
DARPA's FAST program aims to develop a new, ultra-lightweight High Power
Generation System (HPGS) that can generate up to 175 kilowatts -- more
power than is currently available to the International Space Station. When
combined with electric propulsion, FAST will form the foundation for future
self-deployed, high-mobility spacecraft to perform ultra-high-power
communications, space radar, satellite transfer and servicing missions.
Boeing Phantom Works of Huntington Beach, California is leading the effort
with support from Boeing Network and Space Systems, El Segundo, California.
The Phase 2 work will include designing, fabricating and integrating test
articles, performing a series of component-level evaluations and running
two full-scale system tests.
"Our team is pleased to partner with DARPA in developing this powerful new
technology," said Tom Kessler, FAST program manager, Boeing Advanced
Network and Space Systems. "FAST offers significant cost and performance
benefits to our commercial, civil and national security customers,
including new high-power applications to provide a cost-effective means for
spacecraft to travel to the outer solar system."
During Phase 1 of the program, the Boeing-led team, which includes DR
Technologies, Northrop Grumman Astro Aerospace, Texas A&M University,
EMCORE, Boeing subsidiary Spectrolab Inc., and other key suppliers,
developed a preliminary design for an HPGS capable of providing more than
130 watts per kilogram on a system that is less than half the weight and
one sixth the size of an existing on-orbit solar power system. The team
also defined the test program being conducted in Phase 2, which will verify
the performance and operation of the HPGS's solar concentration, power
conversion, heat rejection, structure and deployment, and sun pointing and
tracking subsystems.
The Boeing team's unique solar concentrator design offers higher
performance and greater radiation tolerance than current on-orbit solar
power generation systems. Boeing will also be using different approaches to
solar cell technology to include capabilities from EMCORE and Spectrolab.
The size efficiency of the HPGS enables a new class of compact spacecraft
that can self-deploy from low-Earth orbit to reach their final orbit using
electric propulsion.