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Redwire
Announces New High-Performance, Low-Mass
Solar Array, Building upon the Success
of its Roll-Out Solar Array Product Line
Redwire Corporation
announced a new high-performance,
low-mass solar array product, the
Extensible Low-Profile Solar Array
(ELSA), designed to meet the needs of
mass-manufactured satellites that
require standardized, modular power
solutions to enable on-orbit operations.
ELSA addresses current and future market
demand from government and commercial
entities requiring higher volume
satellite production to support
warfighter communications,
telecommunications, and more. Leveraging
technical heritage from Redwire’s
Roll-Out Solar Array (ROSA) product
line, modular subsystems, and a parallel
production approach, ELSA bolsters
Redwire’s capability to serve more
markets by providing reliable, robust,
and affordable power in a compact
foldable package.
ELSA provides up to
50% more power by volume than our
traditional solar arrays and is designed
to minimize solar array stowed volume
and mass while remaining competitive
with conventional solar array
performance and pricing. ELSA offers a
significant improvement in modular,
scalable design and rapid production to
support customers with low to
medium-power applications across all
orbits.
“ELSA will broaden
Redwire’s solar array offerings into
exciting new public and private sector
markets,” said Mike Gold, President of
Redwire’s Space business segment.
“Demand for power in space is already
robust and will only continue to grow at
a rapid pace. We’re eager to leverage
the singular success and flight heritage
of ROSA to support the growing needs of
customers for innovative power
solutions.”
Redwire is a market
leader in space power solutions, with a
proven track record of innovation and
on-orbit success. Redwire’s ROSAs have a
100% on-orbit success rate on flagship
space missions, including the
International Space Station and NASA’s
Double Asteroid Redirection Test
mission. Redwire is currently
manufacturing a pair of the most
powerful ROSAs ever built for NASA’s
Lunar Gateway, along with multiple
arrays for Thales Alenia Space’s Space
INSPIRE satellites and Blue Origin’s
multi-orbit space mobility platform,
Blue Ring.
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