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Raytheon Wins $886M
USAF GPS OCX Contract
March 1, 2010
The
U.S. Air Force has selected Raytheon for an initial contract of $886
million to develop a new element of the Global Positioning System to
improve the accuracy of information from GPS satellites.
The contract represents the first two development blocks of the advanced
control segment (OCX), which will have a significant impact on GPS
capabilities. The OCX will include anti-jam capabilities and improved
security, accuracy and reliability and will be based on a modern
service-oriented architecture to integrate government and industry
open-system standards.
“We are excited to partner with the Air Force to provide the best-value
GPS control system for the future,” said Lynn Dugle, president of
Raytheon’s Intelligence and Information Systems business. “Raytheon’s
broad experience in delivering satellite-to-ground command-and-control
systems will ensure that our nation’s military and civil GPS users
worldwide are provided new capabilities.”
The OCX will dramatically affect GPS command, control and mission
capabilities and make it easier for the operations team to run the
current GPS block II and all future GPS satellites.
“Raytheon
is proud to deliver innovative technologies to help the Air Force meet
its mission of protecting GPS operational services,” said Bob Canty, GPS
vice president and program manager for Raytheon. “The advanced control
segment is a critical program for our nation’s combat forces, coalition
partners, as well as domestic and international civil users. By
selecting Raytheon, the Air Force recognizes our experience and
commitment to take GPS to the next level.”
The GPS, a satellite-based radio navigation system for the military and
the public, comprises three major segments: the user segment, the space
segment and the control segment, which includes a master control station
and ground antennas.
“The OCX concept was created to separate the control and space
segments,” Canty said. “Technologies were evolving so rapidly and were
so critical to execution that specialized skills were needed. The GPS
wing saw the same need for specialized expertise on GPS OCX.” |