DARPA awarded Raytheon subsidiary BBN Technologies a $2.4 million contract to design and integrate an information architecture for wireless, small module satellites as part of the System F6 program. Under System F6, DARPA researchers seek to break the paradigm of designing large—and expensive—monolithic satellites by creating a “virtual satellite” that is made up of small, affordable modules that are physically separated in a cluster on orbit, but function seamlessly as a whole via a wireless network. That’s where BBN comes in. “With this contract award, our goal is nothing short of assuring that DARPA gets a superior networking capability that enables F6’s many advantages over a single, large satellite,” said Craig Partridge, BBN principal investigator, in the company’s release.
SDA’s Next Phase of Data Transport Satellites on Hold
June 30, 2025
The long-term future of one of the Space Development Agency’s two satellite constellations is on hold as officials study the options for replacing a planned “data transport layer” with one or more commercial solutions. President Trump’s proposed 2026 defense budget...