11/6/2015 - LOS ANGELES AIR FORCE BASE, El Segundo, Calif. -- The
Space and Missile Systems Center at Los Angeles Air Force Base
celebrated the 45th anniversary of the launch of the first Defense
Support Program satellite today. It was the beginning of a satellite
constellation that has provided early missile warning to our nation's
leaders and warfighters for almost five decades.
The launch of the maiden DSP spacecraft from Cape Canaveral, Fla., was
successfully accomplished on Nov. 6, 1970. For 45 years, the DSP early
warning satellite system has provided 24-hour, worldwide surveillance
for missile warning and nuclear burst detection and serves as the space
segment of the U.S. Integrated Tactical Warning and Attack Assessment
System.
The DSP program was a follow-on to the Missile Defense Alarm System and
Vela Programs. MIDAS was started in 1960 and proved the operational
concept of space based infrared detectors and other technologies by
1963. The Vela program was developed in 1963 to monitor nuclear test ban
treaty compliance. Both programs were consolidated into the Defense
Support Program. Since then, a dedicated team of scientists, engineers,
acquisition specialists, civilian contractors and space professionals
has ensured that the DSP system performed better than advertised with
the successful delivery of 22 satellites on-orbit.
"Starting with the first launch 45 years ago and continuing today, this
venerable satellite system has stared down on the Earth from its
geosynchronous orbit tens of thousands of miles above our planet's
surface," said Lt. Gen. Samuel Greaves, SMC commander and Air Force
program executive officer for space. "The resiliency and tenacity of the
DSP constellation is a testament to the hard work and dedication of the
men and women across the government and industry team of the Defense
Support Program. We offer our congratulations on the achievement of such
a monumental milestone, and look forward to many more years of mission
success!"
The original contractors for the DSP satellite were TRW - now Northrop
Grumman Aerospace Systems - for the spacecraft and Aerojet - now
Northrop Grumman Electronic Systems - for the infrared sensor. In 2001
and 2002, Aerojet and TRW became part of Northrop Grumman Corporation
and today, Northrop Grumman continues to sustain the on-orbit spacecraft
through its facilities in Redondo Beach and Azuza, Calif. and at
Buckley Air Force Base, Colo.
"The Defense Support Program has a rich history providing invaluable
support to the nation's critical nuclear deterrence mission helping to
win the Cold War and providing theater missile warning to warfighters
and allies during Desert Storm," said Col. Mike Guetlein, director,
Remote Sensing Systems Directorate. "It continues to provide strategic
and theater missile threat deterrence to this day, and we are extremely
proud of the DSP legacy."
Acquisition and sustainment support for the DSP constellation is managed
by the Remote Sensing Systems Directorate for SMC at Los Angeles AFB in
El Segundo, Calif., and at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo. RS also
manages the follow-on capability to DSP, the Space Based Infrared System
program, which builds on DSP's legacy of providing timely warning of
strategic and theater missile warning threats and other infrared
terrestrial events. Both systems are operated by the 460th Space Wing
headquartered at Buckley Air Force Base, Colo.
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