In April 2020,
Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) was awarded a contract to supply SOLAR-1's
magnetometer instrument. The magnetometer instrument sits on the long boom and has been developed at the
Institut für Weltraumforschung (Space Research Institute), Graz, Austria. On 1 July 2020, on behalf of NOAA,
NASA awarded the SOLAR-1 Solar Wind Plasma Sensor (SWiPS) contract to
Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in
San Antonio,
Texas. SwRI was awarded a contract with a total value of US$15.6 million. The period of performance is 76 months. SOLAR-1 will provide NOAA with the continuity of solar wind data and coronal mass ejection imagery, the National Weather Service's highest priority for space weather observations. University of California, Berkeley was awarded US$7.5 million for the development of the Supra-Thermal Ion Sensor (STIS). The SOLAR-1 satellite will collect upstream solar wind data and coronal imagery to support NOAA's mission to monitor and forecast space weather events. NOAA is responsible for the Space Weather Follow On program. NASA is the program's flight system procurement agent, and NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland, is the lead for this acquisition. On 5 February 2021, NOAA awarded the SOLAR-1
Command and control contract to
L3Harris in
Melbourne, Florida. The contract has a total value of US$43.8 million, with a five-year performance period. The SOLAR-1 mission is planned to launch as a rideshare with NASA's
Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP). The contractor is responsible for up to two years of operations support. This will be accomplished by adding the capability to the existing
Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R Series Core Ground System. == Launch ==