Future Army Nanosatellites to Empower Soldiers
July 30, 2015 | U.S. ArmyEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
One Army project is making the future of satellite communications more responsive to Soldiers' needs.
The U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command's Nanosatellite Program, or SNaP, will be a small satellite communications, or SATCOM, constellation. This will allow communication across great distances using existing UHF tactical radios.
"SNaP is a technology demonstration with the goal of showing the military utility nanosatellites can provide to the disadvantaged user," said Thomas E. Webber, director, SMDC Technical Center Space and Strategic Systems Directorate. "The primary uses are beyond line of sight communications and data exfiltration. SNaP is a natural fit for the command since we are the Army proponent for space and also the SATCOM provider."
The command is engaged in organizing, manning, equipping and training space forces for the Army. The Army is the largest user of space and space-based capabilities.
In many remote areas where Soldiers operate, service members radio over-the-horizon communication from the field to higher headquarters, like the brigade, is nonexistent. Army scientists and researchers built the SMDC-ONE nanosatellite as an innovative technology solution. The ONE stands for Orbital Nanosatellite Effect.
SMDC-ONE was a technology demonstration, which showed nanosatellites in low Earth orbit could be used for beyond-line-of-sight communications and data exfiltration. Three next-generation SNaP nanosatellites are scheduled to launch this year and an undetermined number could go up afterward.
SNaP is a 5-kilogram mass cube satellite, or CubeSat, which costs about $500,000 and is about the size of a loaf of bread. It provides data and over-the-horizon communications capabilities. It also has multi-functional relay capability with five times the data rate of SMDC-ONE.
"SNaP will provide beyond-line-of-sight communications and data in disadvantaged environments to the warfighter and provide communication ability for users, who might not otherwise have communications, due to user location or overhead cover," said Jeff A. Stewart, technical manager, SMDC Space Division.
Another difference from previous satellites is that this is the first CubeSat launch with propulsion capability and SMDC's first with deployable solar arrays for battery charging.
"SNaP uses deployable solar arrays versus fixed arrays to increase power generation over SMDC-ONE," Stewart said. "SNaP also has a propulsion capability for station keeping to maintain constellation spacing."
On previous satellites, solar panels were attached to the sides of the satellite. At any one time, only two panels would be pointed at the sun. With deployable arrays, operators can orient all four toward the sun.
"Nanosatellites in low-Earth orbit are traveling approximately 17,000 mph and are about the size of a football, which makes them very survivable," Webber said. "Providing the ability for our warfighter to communicate in an environment where traditional SATCOM is unavailable can literally be the difference between life and death."
SMDC plans for future constellations of relatively low-cost nanosatellites deployed in mission-specific, low-Earth, which provide cost effective, beyond-line-of-sight data communications capabilities.
"SNaP will provide resiliency to the warfighter communication capability by providing beyond-line-of-site communications when no satellite communication is available due to line-of-site issues or due to a denied or degraded environment," Webber said.
The Army's goal for SNaP seeks to use small satellites to provide dedicated coverage to a wide range of under-served users in remote areas.
"SNaP is another step for the command toward providing a communications capability available to and commanded by the unit level," Stewart said. "SMDC-ONE laid the groundwork upon which SNaP is expanding."
The U.S. Southern Command is partnering with SMDC, the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School and other Department of Defense organizations to evaluate emerging nanosatellite technologies through the SNaP Joint Capability Technology Demonstration.
The project will evaluate the effectiveness of small, lower-cost satellites, which provide communications capabilities, enable mission command on the move and allow tactical leaders to synchronize actions, seize the initiative and maintain situational awareness, officials said.
"SNaP is designed for UHF communication with existing Army and some coalition radios," Webber said. "The advantage low-Earth orbit provides is the fact that satellites are so much closer to the Earth, which allows much lower signal levels to be received and processed."
The command delivered three nanosatellites in March for a late 2015 launch with United Launch Alliance on Vandenberg Air Force Base, California.
Suggested Items
RTX, Shield AI Partner to Develop New Defense Capabilities
07/01/2025 | RTXRTX and Shield AI announced a new partnership to integrate Shield AI capabilities into select RTX defense products, like loitering munitions and sensors. This collaboration will deliver enhanced, autonomous capabilities to US and allied defense forces.
Lockheed Martin Completes Acquisition of Amentum’s Rapid Solutions Portfolio
07/01/2025 | Lockheed MartinLockheed Martin has closed its acquisition of the Rapid Solutions business of Amentum, an engineering and technology solutions company.
Saab Receives Order for Ground-Based Air Defense from Sweden
07/01/2025 | SaabSaab has received an order from the Swedish Defense Materiel Administration (FMV) for the mobile short-range air defense solution RBS 70 NG with missiles.
Kitron Strengthens Order Backlog with EUR 11 Million Contract for Defense Communication
07/01/2025 | KitronKitron has received an order valued at EUR 11 million to produce advanced military communication products destined for the European market.
Beyond the Board: Orbital High Ground—Why Space Superiority Is Slipping Away
06/17/2025 | Jesse Vaughan -- Column: Beyond the Board“The next war might be won—or lost—22,000 miles above Earth.” That’s not science fiction. It’s the stark reality defense planners are beginning to confront as space transitions from a support domain to a full-spectrum warfighting environment. For decades, the United States held an uncontested advantage in space, relying on exquisite, few, and highly capable systems to enable precision warfare, real-time intelligence, and global communications. Today, that edge is under siege.