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Lockheed Martin UK Holdings Ltd

  • 100 Cannon Street London EC4N 6EU
    EC4N 6EU
    United Kingdom
  • +44 (0)20 7979 8000
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Lockheed Martin UK Holdings Ltd Articles

Displaying 1 - 5 of 5
STEM News
29th September 2023
Aim for the stars! Two new space camps launched in London and Sunderland

Viasat, Inc. and Lockheed Martin announced a renewed collaboration with the National Space Academy to offer two Space Camps, one hosted by each company.

Aerospace & Defence
29th September 2017
Lockheed Martin unveils water-powered Mars lander

A reusable, water-powered Mars lander that will allow humans to explore the Red Planet from an orbiting 'base camp' as early as the 2030s was unveiled Friday by US defence giant Lockheed Martin. Governments and private firms are collaborating on projects to send humans to new frontiers, with NASA planning missions next decade into the space between Earth and the Moon to prepare for trips to Mars.

Aerospace & Defence
12th April 2016
Sensitive IR instrument is ready for the NASA Telescope

The ultra-sensitive, highly precise Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope (Webb telescope) beat its most stringent requirements during Integrated Science Instrument Module (ISIM) testing, which is now complete. Lockheed Martin built the instrument for the University of Arizona and NASA to serve as both the primary science instrument and the primary mirror-alignment sensor aboard the telescope.

Analysis
9th March 2016
Cool technology turns down the heat on high-tech equipment

Thousands of electrical components make up today's most sophisticated systems – and without innovative cooling techniques, those systems get hot. Lockheed Martin is working with the DARPA Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) on its ICECool-Applications research program that could ultimately lead to a lighter, faster and cheaper way to cool high-powered microchips – by cooling the chips with microscopic drops of water.

Design
27th January 2016
New design for lighter and smaller space telescopes

Lockheed Martin is developing a telescope that trades the bulky structure of current two-mirror models for a thin layer of hundreds - or potentially thousands - of tiny lenses that transmit the image to a silicon chip, similar to the camera in smartphones. The system is called SPIDER (Segmented Planar Imaging Detector for Electro-optical Reconnaissance), and works on the principle of interferometry.

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