Northrop Grumman — SSEP / NGHT-1X¶
Division: Tactical Space Systems (formerly Space Systems) | HQ: Baltimore, MD SST partnership: Annex to Collaborative Opportunity (ACO) with NASA Glenn Research Center Product: NGHT-1X Hall-effect thruster → Mission Extension Pod (MEP) satellite servicing
Last updated: 2026-04-14 (session 34)
SST Connection¶
| SST Project | Technology | TRL | Period | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 116400 — Small Spacecraft Electric Propulsion (SSEP) | NASA-H71M Hall thruster | 4→5 | 2021-01 → 2024-09 | ACO (Annex to Collaborative Opportunity) |
PI: Eric J. Pencil (NASA GRC Project Manager) States: OH (GRC), VA (NG)
Unlike most SST projects where NASA funds a company, SSEP was a co-development: NASA GRC designed the H71M thruster; Northrop Grumman partnered via ACO to raise TRL through combined testing. NG then licensed the NASA technology for commercial use.
The Technology: NASA-H71M → NGHT-1X¶
The NASA-H71M is a sub-kilowatt Hall-effect thruster designed for small spacecraft with large delta-V needs:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Input power | 200–1,000 W |
| Specific impulse | 1,750 s nominal (peak ~1,900 s) |
| Total impulse | >2.5 MN-s (with 50% margin) |
| Propellant throughput | >140 kg xenon |
| Delta-V capability | >7 km/s for 180 kg spacecraft with 60 kg Xe |
This is ~5× the total impulse of current state-of-the-art sub-kW Hall thrusters. A spacecraft using SSEP technology could self-propel from LEO to the Moon, or from GTO to Mars.
Northrop Grumman licensed the H71M as the NGHT-1X — their commercially available sub-kW Hall thruster. The technology flows from NASA to NG through formal IP licensing, not through a startup intermediary or acquisition.
Commercial Application: Mission Extension Pod (MEP) + Mission Robotic Vehicle (MRV)¶
SpaceLogistics, a wholly owned subsidiary of Northrop Grumman, developed the Mission Extension Pod (MEP) — a compact propulsion "jet pack" equipped with NGHT-1X thrusters, and the Mission Robotic Vehicle (MRV) — a robot-armed servicer that installs MEPs onto client satellites in GEO.
Architecture (updated session 34): 1. MRV launches to GEO carrying multiple MEPs 2. MRV uses robotic arms to install a MEP onto each client satellite 3. Each MEP extends host satellite life by 6+ years via NGHT-1X orbit-keeping 4. Host satellite operator avoids $200M+ replacement cost per satellite
Customers (3 confirmed): - Intelsat — 2 satellites serviced via MEP (ordered Apr 2023, service beginning 2026) - Optus — 1 satellite - All serviced by a single MRV hosting the MEPs
Timeline: - MRV with first 3 MEPs: eyeing 2026 launch (SpaceNews, Feb 2026). MRV is a next-generation platform beyond MEV - Builds on SpaceLogistics' MEV heritage — MEV-1 docked to Intelsat-901 (2020), MEV-2 to Intelsat 10-02 (2021)
MEP is smaller and cheaper than MEV (which uses NG's full-size satellite bus). The NGHT-1X enables MEP's compact form factor — high Isp with enough total impulse for GEO station-keeping. The MRV+MEP system scales servicing from 1-at-a-time (MEV model) to a multi-customer platform. Confidence: confirmed (SpaceNews, NG press releases, Intelsat announcement).
Testing and Validation¶
Long Duration Wear Test (LDWT): - Conducted at NASA GRC Vacuum Facility 11 (VF-11) - Funded by Northrop Grumman through fully reimbursable Space Act Agreement - Demonstrates full lifetime operational capability of NGHT-1X - Engineering Model development complete; progressing to qualification and flight unit build/test
NTRS publications (2 confirmed): 1. 20220007774 — "Overview and Performance Characterization of Northrop Grumman's 1 kW Hall Thruster String" (IEPC-2022-303, GRC, 2022). Authors: Nikrant, Glogowski, Cochran, Moquin, Choi. 2. 20230016674 — "NGHT-1X Pole Cover Erosion Measurements on Xenon and Krypton" (IEPC-2024, GRC, 2024). Authors: Nikrant, Switzer, Glogowski, Benavides, Baird.
Both papers published at IEPC (International Electric Propulsion Conference), the premier venue for EP technology.
Upstream Lineage¶
| Source | Period | Connection |
|---|---|---|
| NASA GRC Hall thruster expertise | Decades | GRC is the institutional home for NASA Hall thruster R&D |
| NG MEV-1/MEV-2 satellite servicing | 2020-2021 | Proved the satellite life extension business model |
| SpaceLogistics subsidiary | 2018+ | Commercial entity for on-orbit servicing |
| SST ACO [116400] | 2021-2024 | Co-developed H71M; NG licensed as NGHT-1X |
Downstream Impact¶
| Outcome | Details | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| NGHT-1X commercial thruster | Licensed from NASA H71M, available for NG and potentially other platforms | confirmed |
| MEP satellite servicing | First 3 units launching 2025, each extending GEO comsat life 6+ years | confirmed |
| New commercial market | Satellite servicing is a multi-billion-dollar addressable market | suggestive |
| NASA deep-space SmallSat enabler | SSEP design enables LEO→Moon or GTO→Mars transit for 180 kg spacecraft | suggestive |
| GRC wear test data | Long-duration test at VF-11 generates public EP performance data | confirmed |
Assessment¶
Archetype: Defense Prime Technology Licensing — SST's only example of a defense prime co-developing with a NASA center and licensing the result for a commercial product. No startup risk, no acquisition needed.
What makes this distinctive: - Reverse flow: Most SST tech goes startup → acquisition by prime. Here, NASA center → prime directly. - Business model innovation: MEP is smaller/cheaper than MEV, enabled by NGHT-1X's compact high-performance. SST technology didn't just improve an existing product — it enabled a new product category. - Self-funding validation: NG pays for the wear test at GRC via reimbursable Space Act Agreement. The commercial customer is funding the government facility to validate the government's own technology — a mature public-private partnership. - Sub-kW sweet spot: NGHT-1X fills a performance gap — 5× better than existing sub-kW Hall thrusters. The SmallSat revolution needs exactly this: propulsion that lets small spacecraft do big maneuvers. - Only n=1 in SST: This is the only ACO-based technology licensing in the SST portfolio. Whether NASA can replicate this model with other primes is an open question.
Outcome: commercialized | Confidence: confirmed (ACO → license → product → 2025 launch manifest)