DARPA Awards $14.9M Contract to Phase Four
Will Develop Air Breathing Electric Propulsion for VLEO Operations
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has awarded a $14.9 million contract to Phase Four to deliver an "air-breathing" EP system to enable extended satellite operations in Very Low Earth Orbit (VLEO), at altitudes as low as 90-450 km (56-280 miles).
"With the addition of the Otter program, Phase Four's portfolio of propulsion capabilities will now span the totality of the space domain, from near-space to deep space."
Jason Wallace, Phase Four
The award is part of DARPA's Otter program, which aims to develop, demonstrate, and collect on-orbit data for "air breathing" electric propulsion technologies that will harvest ambient low-density air as propellant, enabling extended satellite operations at VLEO altitudes. The Otter program will culminate in a long duration "orbiting wind tunnel" spaceflight demonstration, characterizing the performance of the "air-breathing" EP system in the orbital environment.
DARPA's Otter program will leverage Phase Four's innovative core technology, the radio frequency thruster (RFT), which is inherently propellant agnostic compared to legacy electric propulsion systems which rapidly degrade when exposed to non-traditional propellants. This feature uniquely enables the RFT to operate on the low-density air harvested in the VLEO environment. The Otter program will build upon a previous effort with DARPA that developed a proof-of-concept thruster prototype for novel, low-cost propellants.
"Phase Four has designed and built electric propulsion systems that have been launched on 9 satellites with over 5,300 days of on-orbit flight heritage since the company was founded," said Umair Siddiqui, Phase Four's president and CTO, and Principal Investigator for the effort. "We're thrilled to bring that heritage, experience, and innovation in electric propulsion systems to the Otter program."
"With the addition of the Otter program, Phase Four's portfolio of propulsion capabilities will now span the totality of the space domain, from near-space to deep space," said Jason Wallace, president of Government Programs at Phase Four. "We look forward to working closely with DARPA to unlock sustained missions in VLEO, which will increasingly become a critical operational environment for national security as traditional orbits become congested and contested."