Silentium Defence has secured a $3.2 million contract from the Australian Department of Defence to advance, deploy and demonstrate its passive radar system for monitoring traffic in space.
The funding comes as part of the Defence Innovation Hub’s latest round of industry grants, totalling $28 million.
Designed and developed in Adelaide, South Australia, Silentiumโs MAVERICK S-series is the first commercial-scale passive radar system for surveillance of space and will provide persistent detection and tracking of objects in low earth orbit to support space-traffic management.
The system requires no spectrum allocation to operate and it can detect and track objects and measure rate of movement in low earth orbit regardless of weather, visibility, or time of day.
The Wingfield-based company also announced in June it would lead a project to build a multi-sensor space observatory in remote South Australia.
That project, in collaboration with Western Sydney University, was also awarded $1.46 million through the Australian Space Agency in June.
Silentium Defence CEO Dr James Palmer said the latest contract win showed that โdefence recognises the risk posed by the increasingly congested and contested space domainโ.
He said the passive radar would be powerful but low power, accurate and agile enough to deliver a transformative capability for the Australian Defence Force and its allies.
โSatellite systems are vulnerable to space debris and advanced counter-space capabilities which can deny, disrupt and destroy our space-based systems,โ Palmer said.
โSafe and assured access to this critical domain is predicated on availability of high-quality, real-time data to inform decision making.
โThat is what the MAVERICK S-series will deliver, and weโre delighted to further advance the system using local skills and local technology with support and input from defence.โ
The contract will see Silentium Defence move from its successful completion of phase one to the start of phase two deployment under the Defence Innovation Hub program.
The observatory is expected to be completed next year and is being built near the River Murray town of Swan Reach, 160km north-east of Adelaide and on the edge of South Australiaโs only officially sanctioned International Dark Sky Place.
Another South Australian company, Prism Systems, also received a $925,000 grant in the funding round towards developing and demonstrating an integrated capability solution for the Royal Australian Navy.
The innovation seeks to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of ship and aviation system integration flight trials through automating processes, analysis, recording, and reporting of data.
South Australia is also home to major tier-one defence companies and several emerging space startups, including Fleet Space Technologies, Inovor Technologies and Myriota.
Minister for Defence Industry Melissa Price said the latest contracts provided Australian businesses with opportunities that could enhance defence capability.
The Australian governmentโs goal is to triple the size of the nationโs space sector to $12 billion and create an extra 20,000 jobs by 2030.
This article was first published by The Lead.
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