Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.’s Ozone Mapping and Profiler Suite (OMPS) Protoflight Model (PFM) that will fly aboard the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) Preparatory Project (NPP) has entered final integration and acceptance testing. The Company expects to complete integration and testing in August and deliver the
OMPS PFM for spacecraft integration no later than September 30th. OMPS is one of five sensors built for the
NPP risk reduction mission, scheduled to launch in 2010. The NPP mission, a joint effort between
NASA and the
NPOESS Integrated Program Office, is designed to extend key measurements in support of long-term climate trend monitoring and global biological productivity and prove technologies for the NPOESS mission.
Northrop Grumman Corp. is the prime contractor for NPOESS, leading the effort to design, develop and launch the next generation low-Earth orbiting operational environmental monitoring system.

Initial assembly has also begun on the
OMPS Flight Model 2 for the first
NPOESS spacecraft. Nadir sensor fabrication is well underway with both focal planes complete and fabrication of the main electronics box has begun. The OMPS FM2 delivery is scheduled for December 2010, in preparation for the NPOESS launch scheduled for 2013. OMPS will monitor ozone from space, collect total column and vertical profile ozone data, and continue the current daily global data provided by the Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet radiometer (
SBUV)/2 and Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (
TOMS), but with higher fidelity.
Ball Aerospace is also building the NPP spacecraft, a modified
Ball Commercial Platform (BCP) 2000 under a contract to the
Goddard Space Flight Center Rapid Spacecraft Development Office.
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