Lockheed Martin has opened a Space Fence test site in Moorestown, N.J., that will allow for testing of the system’s hardware and software while the actual, six-acre site is being built on Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific Ocean, the company announced Monday. The Space Fence will use S-band ground-based radar to detect and track objects and debris in space to prevent collisions, and will replace the existing Air Force Space Surveillance System. “We are one step closer to dramatically improving space situational awareness and increasing orbital debris monitoring by tenfold,” said Bruce Schafhauser, Lockheed Martin’s space fence program director, according to the release. A scaled-down version of the Space Fence system first tracked a satellite at the end of January, according to an earlier Lockheed release. Initial operational capability is scheduled for late 2018.
The Department of the Air Force's new space acquisition chief said he will seek to expand the types of orbits used by the Space Force's future satellite constellations in the interest of improving their resilience. At the same time, he would aim to acquire smaller satellites that can be produced…