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Ball Aerospace & Technologies
American aerospace company (1956–2024)
American aerospace company (1956–2024)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. |
| logo | Batc frame hor.png |
| type | Subsidiary |
| foundation | |
| defunct | |
| fate | Acquired by BAE Systems Inc. |
| location | Broomfield, Colorado, U.S. |
| key_people | Dave Kaufman - President |
| industry | Spacecraft, defense, scientific instruments |
| num_employees | (2023) |
| homepage |
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp., commonly Ball Aerospace, was an American manufacturer of spacecraft, components and instruments for national defense, civil space and commercial space applications.
Until 2024, the firm was a wholly owned subsidiary of Ball Corporation, with primary offices in Boulder, Colorado, and facilities in Broomfield and Westminster in Colorado, with smaller offices in New Mexico, Ohio, northern Virginia, Missouri and Maryland. It was acquired by BAE Systems Inc. in 2024, and is operated as a new division within BAE called Space & Mission systems.
History
Ball Aerospace began building pointing controls for military rockets in 1956. The aerospace part of the Ball Corporation was then known as Ball Brothers Research Corporation, and later won a contract to build some of NASA's first spacecraft, the Orbiting Solar Observatory satellites. The company has been responsible for numerous technological and scientific projects and continues to provide aerospace technology to NASA and related industries.
Other products and services for the aerospace industry include lubricants, optical systems, star trackers and antennas. As a wholly owned subsidiary of the Ball Corporation, Ball Aerospace was cited in 2023 as the 54th largest defense contractor in the world. Both parent and subsidiary headquarters are co-located in Broomfield, Colorado.
In August 2023, Ball Corporation agreed to divest Ball Aerospace to BAE Systems Inc. for $5.6 billion in cash. On February 14, 2024 The companies announced that all regulatory approvals were in place to allow the deal to complete. The deal was closed on February 16, 2024.
Participating projects
- The Orbital Express autonomous satellite servicing mission
- The WorldView-2 Earth observation satellite.
- AEROS (satellite)
- Ralph (New Horizons instrument)
- Chandra X-ray Observatory aspect camera (star tracker) and SIM (science instrument module)
- Hubble Space Telescope: seven science instruments (COS, WFC3, ACS, NICMOS, STIS, COSTAR, and GHRS), two star trackers, five major equipment subsystems, and custom tools to support service missions
- James Webb Space Telescope optical mirror system
- Kepler space telescope
References
References
- King, Ian. (August 17, 2023). "Why BAE bought Ball Aerospace and why it matters". Sky News.
- Mullholand, Sarah. (February 16, 2024). "Ball Corp. sells off its aerospace division in multibillion-dollar deal". [[Colorado Public Radio]].
- "Top 100 {{!}} Defense News, News about defense programs, business, and technology".
- (2022). "Defense News Top 100 (2022)". Defense News Research.
- Shabong, Yadarisa. (August 17, 2023). "BAE snaps up Ball's aerospace arm for $5.6 billion in its biggest deal ever". Reuters.
- (14 February 2024). "BAE Systems wins approval for Ball Aerospace acquisition".
- "Orbital Express".
- "DigitalGlobe announces Ball building WorldView 2 satellite".
- Yenne, Bill. (1985). "''The Encyclopedia of US Spacecraft''". Exeter Books (A Bison Book), New York.
- "Ball Aerospace - New Horizons/Ralph".
- "Ball Aerospace - Chandra X-ray Observatory".
- "Ball Aerospace - Hubble Space Telescope".
- "Ball Aerospace - Webb Space Telescope".
- (30 January 2009). "Ball Aerospace team assembles Kepler spacecraft".
- "Ball Aerospace-Built Kepler Spacecraft Launches From Cape Canaveral".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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