In 2007,
DARPA,
the Pentagon's advanced technology organization, issued an announcement soliciting proposals for a program entitled System F6, which aims to prove "the feasibility and benefits" of a fractionated satellite architecture through a space demonstration. The program appears to emphasize
wireless networking as a critical technical enabler, along with
econometric modeling to assess if and when the architecture is advantageous over conventional approaches DARPA called for
open-source development of the networking and
communications protocols and interfaces for the fractionated spacecraft modules. This unusual step was presumably in an effort to proliferate the concept and mirror in space the development of the terrestrial
Internet. In 2008, DARPA announced that contracts for the preliminary development phase of the System F6 program were issued to teams headed by
Boeing,
Lockheed Martin,
Northrop Grumman, and
Orbital Sciences. In December 2009 the second phase of the program was awarded to
Orbital Sciences, along with
IBM and
JPL. In February 2010, the European Space Agency (ESA) completed a study on fractionated satellites under the GSTP program.
ANDESITE is a fractionated spacecraft with 8 components, and was launched on June 13, 2020. == Miscellaneous ==