Our software focused technology is designed to address the growing number of assets in orbit by expanding the range of autonomous activities including autonomous navigation, in-orbit asset inspection, servicing and robotic manipulation. This enables spacecraft to do work autonomously, reduces costs through reduced human involvement in satellite operations, and increases revenues for the satellite operators through the newfound ability to perform operations management, maintenance, repair and life extension.
Currently, autonomy is being applied and perfected in the most crowded and contested space domain – Low Earth Orbit (LEO). NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) both agree on the future space exploration roadmaps: after LEO, comes the Moon and then Mars. As we move further, autonomy gains its importance and in many cases, it becomes an inevitable solution because of the constraints of communication and human ability. Our current technology developments are perfectly aligned with these roadmaps.
Autonomy expands the current and opens up new possibilities for future space missions: