Hear from the team making this mission possible. The mission is a team effort, bringing together employees from across the company.
Orbital Power
Shaping National Security from Space
Summary: Northrop Grumman utilizes orbital diversity to enhance national security in space, optimizing satellite capabilities across multiple orbits. This resilient architecture ensures mission success by balancing advantages and trade-offs of low Earth, medium Earth, and geosynchronous orbits.
Key Takeaways:
- Northrop Grumman employs orbital diversity to create resilient space architectures, ensuring mission success amid evolving security threats.
- Technological innovations enable better satellite performance in challenging environments, enhancing national defense capabilities through improved resilience and cost-efficiency.
By Rachel Ellis
Mission success in space requires making tough decisions. How, where, and when a mission will operate is the result of meticulous scrutiny.
For example, a key decision is which orbit — which path in space to take around the Earth — to fly in, as each has distinct advantages and trade-offs.
According to Carlos Niederstrasser, a senior space mission architect at Northrop Grumman, spacecraft can follow any elliptical trajectory because space is infinite, although the four commonly referenced categories are low Earth orbit (LEO), medium Earth orbit (MEO), geosynchronous orbit (GEO), and highly elliptical orbit (HEO).
Northrop Grumman is one of the only companies with the expertise and capability to design, build and operate systems across an array of orbits surrounding Earth. This is critical, as operating in multiple orbits enables resilient, adaptable space architectures. As a result, complex space missions incorporate satellites and space systems in multiple orbits to achieve their objectives.
Leveraging a variety of orbits — a practice known as orbital diversity — plays a key role in achieving architectural resiliency for no-fail missions, like national security, that encompass several space-based systems. Operating diverse space systems across various orbits ensures that if, for whatever reason, one space asset in the architecture is unable to complete a given mission there are other options, in alternative orbits, in place to complete the mission.
“A resilient architecture is one that can provide services with no or minimal degradation in the face of the most challenging of situations imaginable,” said Carlos.



