Ball Aerospace

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Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ball Corp. (NYSE: BLL), with primary offices and facilities in Boulder, Broomfield and Westminster in Colorado, with smaller offices in New Mexico, Ohio and northern Virginia.

Ball Aerospace designs and manufactures spacecraft, components and instruments for national defense, civil space and commercial space applications. The company began building pointing controls for military rockets in 1956, and later won a contract to build one of NASA’s first spacecraft, the Orbiting Solar Observatory. Over the years, the company has been responsible for numerous technological and scientific ‘firsts’ and now acts as a technology innovator for important national missions.

Ball Aerospace also has many other products and services for the aerospace industry, including lubricants, optical systems, star trackers and antennas. As a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Ball Corp., Ball Aerospace was cited in 2005 as the 99th largest defense contractor in the world.[1] Ball Corp. celebrated its 125th anniversary in 2005, and Ball Aerospace is celebrating its 50th anniversary during 2006. Both parent and subsidiary headquarters are co-located in Broomfield, Colorado.


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[edit] Ball Aerospace Projects

Ball Aerospace has been involved in the design and manufacture of many notable programs including:

  • The instrumentation for the Spitzer Space Telescope. Ball Aerospace developed the Cryogenic Telescope Assembly (CTA) and two of the three science instruments: the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) and the Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS).
  • Instrument packages for the Hubble Telescope, including the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) and the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3), all which will be installed on the observatory during the Space Shuttle servicing mission scheduled for 2008. When the servicing mission is complete, all of Hubble's scientific instruments will be of Ball Aerospace manufacture.
  • NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft. Ball Aerospace designed and built the spacecraft and all of its instrument packages.
  • CALIPSO
  • CloudSat
  • Star trackers for NASA's Space Shuttle program
  • The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) HiRISE camera
  • Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) conformal antennas
  • High-Gain Antenna Gimbal (HGAG) and the Panoramic-camera Mast Assembly (PMA)for the Mars Exploration Rover

Some of Ball Aerospace's current projects include:

  • The Kepler Space Observatory satellite to search for habitable planets
  • The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to study the formation of the earliest stars in the universe.
  • The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) Program, which, over a 7 month mission in a polar orbit will map the entire sky in multiple mid-far infrared wavelengths. This crucial mission may find close and cool objects to our sun never before detected. It will also act as a predecessor to the JWST Program.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Defense News Top 100. Defense News Research (2005). Retrieved on 2006-07-29.