TEL AVIV: Israel is planning constellations of nano satellites,
built by Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI),
that will allow almost continuous coverage of “areas of interest,”
which are likely to include Iran, Syria, Lebanon and other
countries, according to experts that are not connected in any way to the
program. IAI refused to comment.
The first nano
satellite
was developed by IAI and was launched into space in 2017 as part of a
scientific experiment. The 5-kilogram satellite — approximately the size
of a milk carton — is equipped with special cameras able to identify
various climatic phenomena, and a monitoring system that allows the
choice of areas to be imaged and researched.
”We are developing the capability to launch a constellation of Nano
satellites. The large number of satellites will give us the capability
for a much higher rate of revisits, and actually a continuous monitoring
of areas of interest.” says Opher Doron, general manager of IAI’s Space
Division.
The nano satellites optical payloads are smaller and the quality of
their optical payloads is lower. ”But by using a temporal resolution
method this problem is dealt with in a very effective way,” Doron
claims. “This method is not directly related to the quality of the
sensor but is based on the
frequency of revisits over a site.“
The other problem with smaller satellites is color. “Resolution is,
of course, very important but we also work on improving the color
quality of the images, Doron said. “A good intelligence expert does not
need color to extract, the needed intelligence from a satellite image,
but when it comes to decision-makers, color is of great importance.”
What underpins all this? It takes a ballistic missile 12 to 15
minutes to travel from Iran to Israel. The earlier a launch is detected
and the earlier the trajectory of the missile can be plotted, the better
the chances to intercept it far from its designated target.
Today, low orbit Ofeq spy satellites visit “areas of interest” in
wide intervals so their optical or radar payloads cannot keep a
persistent watch. When it comes to the ballistic missile threat, this is
a major problem. Israeli sources say that some 30 minutes are needed
from the command to prepare a ballistic missile for launch until it is
ready for launch, and this if the protection silos are well equipped. If
the enemy is aware of the “visiting” time of the spy satellites over
his territory this can be the perfect time to avoid
detection of the preparations until the launch itself.
SBIRS (Space Based Infra-Red System) satellite
Once launch occurs, Israel is supposed to get warnings from Lockheed Martin’s
Space-Based Infrared System (SBIRS),
the US constellation of geosynchronous earth orbit (GEO)
satellites. The U.S also deploys an X-band radar system in southern
Israel to improve detection of ballistic missiles. This complements the
layer supplied by the Green Pine radar, part of the Israeli Arrow
missile interceptors.
The first nano satellite was launched from India on the PSLV-C37
launcher with 103 other nano satellites. The plan to build and launch
nano satellites first emerged a decade ago. A joint
company of IAI and Rafael would undertake the mission. But that plan was deserted.
Yizhak Ben Israel, chairman of the Israeli space agency, served in
the Israeli air force and later was in charge of developing Israel’s
most advanced and classified military systems at the development
directorate in the Defense Ministry. He notes that, although nanosats
possess much less exquisite capabilities than SBIRS or other large
satellites, “when you use a constellation of such satellites the
combined capability can be very effective in missions like locating
missile launchers.” The other advantage of nano satellites is their
price:
“You go from hundreds
of million of dollars for a full size imaging satellite to some millions
of dollars when it comes to a nano satellite.”
Not directly related to the nano satellite program
but part of Israel’s space effort, IAI teamed with British start-up company
Effective Space to
make a fleet of special satellites weighing roughly 880 pounds that can
refuel other satellites in space. IAI signed an agreement for
technological and financial cooperation with the smaller company. While
Effective Space is headquartered in London, its CEO, Arie Halsband, was
general manager of IAI’s space division before starting his own company.
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