Derivatives of the ESPA ring include
satellite dispensers,
space tugs and
satellite buses.
SHERPA Commercial derivatives of the ESPA Grande ring include the Spaceflight Secondary Payload System (SSPS) and SHERPA developed and manufactured by
Andrews Space under contract to Spaceflight Services. SSPS includes five -diameter ports, each capable of carrying payloads weighing up . "The SSPS operates very similar to a standalone spacecraft with a flight computer, electrical power system,
orbit determination capability, and payload
power switching." SHERPA is a powered variant of SSPS capable of large orbit change.
LCROSS ) When NASA upgraded its
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) mission's launch vehicle to an Atlas V, it freed around 2,200 lbs. of additional mass for what would later become the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS). NASA held a competition to see how best to use the space and a number of proposals came from the Ames Research Center. The winning proposal included Moog CSA Engineering's ESPA ring serving as the base mechanical
satellite bus to launch the
LCROSS spacecraft as a secondary payload under the LRO. LCROSS ultimately impacted the lunar surface and confirmed the presence of water ice.
ESPAStar The ESPAStar is a comparable design concept by
Orbital Sciences Corporation. Its maiden flight was on the AFSPC-11 mission as the EAGLE secondary payload.
Long Duration Propulsive ESPA (LDPE) The LDPE (Long Duration Propulsive ESPA) is based on a
Northrop Grumman payload adapter making it a fully operational space tug capable of deploying different payloads at different orbits. The first LDPE was launched on 7 December 2021 on an
Atlas V rocket as part of the
STP-3 mission. It carried the Ascent cubesat from the
Air Force Research Laboratory that was used to test commercial off-the-shelf technologies in geosynchronous orbit, including cold gas thrusters, electric propulsion, and a global position receiver. A second LDPE was launched on 1 November 2022 on a
Falcon Heavy rocket as part of the
USSF-44 mission, and it carried three separable payloads and three hosted payloads. The separable payloads included Alpine, a cubesat from Millennium Space Systems to demonstrate GEO small satellite designs and leverage commercial GEO communications; LINUSS, a Lockheed Martin project consisting of two 12U cubesats to test GEO satellite servicing; and Tetra-1, an SSC small satellite designed as a pathfinder for innovative methods of space vehicle design and on-orbit Tactics Techniques and Procedures development. The hosted payloads included: Mustang, a small sized communications experiment; Xenon, a commercial off-the-shelf component maturation for flight at GEO; and Energetic Charged Particle-Lite, an SSC space weather sensor. A third LDPE was launched on 15 January 2023 on a
Falcon Heavy as part of the
USSF-67 mission, and it carried five hosted payloads. ==References==