Company Profile

Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp.

Company Overview

Company Profile

Based in Boulder, Colorado, Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corp. is a subsidiary of Ball Corporation. Ball Aerospace is a leader in design, development and manufacture of innovative aerospace systems. We produce spacecraft, instruments and sensors, RF and microwave technologies, data exploitation solutions and a variety of advanced aerospace technologies and products that enable exciting missions.

Ball Aerospace is known for its contributions in support of space and Earth science, exploration, national security and intelligence programs. We were also a pioneer in the development of the commercial remote sensing market, producing imaging systems and spacecraft that helped spawn a new market-driven demand for imagery.


Ball Aerospace has served as a technology innovator for defense and civilian government agencies, and commercial customers since 1956. The company’s unique history began at the dawn of the space age and is punctuated by a legacy of enabling many scientific ‘firsts.’ From the first all-sky survey in the infrared to the confirmation of the ozone hole, Ball Aerospace’s legacy is rooted in the ability to make what is thought to be technically impossible, possible. Navigate an interactive timeline of our history, An Era of Excellence, to learn more about the history of innovation and creativity at Ball Aerospace.

We employ approximately 3,000 talented engineers, scientists, technicians and support staff.

Please visit our website: www.ballaerospace.com


Notable Accomplishments / Recognition

Ball Aerospace "Firsts"


Since 1956, Ball Aerospace has built unique technologies for a variety of missions. During its 50 years of business, the company has achieved many first-time accomplishments in the aerospace industry, including:

First solar observation satellite
The Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO) was the first spacecraft built at Ball Aerospace and one of seven the company built for NASA. The OSOs returned data on the ultraviolet, X-ray and gamma ray emissions of the sun and our galaxy.

First instrument to provide confirmation of the Antarctic ozone hole
The Ball Aerospace-built Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Radiometer-2 (SBUV-2) helped to discover the ozone hole above Antarctica in 1987. The company built nine SBUV-2s between 1984 and 2002.

First instrument to provide all-sky imaging of the universe in the infrared from space
The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) was the first space-based, long-life, cryogenically cooled infrared telescope. Ball Aerospace built the IRAS instrument which contained superfluid helium to cool an infrared sensor to nearly 450 degrees below zero (Fahrenheit).

First instrument to provide definitive evidence of the “Big Bang”
Ball Aerospace built the superfluid helium dewar that cooled two of three instruments aboard the Cosmic Background Explorer. The mission confirmed the Big Bang theory of the universe and deepened our understanding of the origin of galaxies and stars.

First Tactical High Energy Laser (THEL) anti-missile defense system
The THEL Advanced Concept Technology Demonstrator proved that current technology can acquire, track and destroy multiple missiles in flight with a high-energy chemical laser. Ball Aerospace provided the beam alignment and stabilization assembly for the demonstrator.

Highest sub-meter resolution on a satellite for commercial remote sensing
Ball Aerospace designed, built, integrated and tested the spacecraft and 61-centimeter imaging system that comprises the QuickBird remote-sensing system. Launched in 2001, QuickBird is the highest resolution commercial satellite in operation.

First spacecraft to intercept a comet
Ball Aerospace designed, built and tested the two spacecraft that comprised the Deep Impact mission to collide with comet Tempel 1, giving scientists a look into its composition and structure.

First instrument to return high-resolution images of the Martian surface from an orbiting platform
Ball Aerospace’s High Resolution Imaging Science Instrument (HiRISE) was launched aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) in 2005 to provide color stereo images of the Martian surface at six times higher resolution than any existing images.

First instrument expected to return high-resolution images of Pluto
Ball Aerospace developed the Ralph imager for the New Horizons mission to Pluto. Ralph will provide images to create maps of Pluto, its moon Charon and other Kuiper Belt objects.

First spacecraft expected to search for extrasolar terrestrial planets from deep space
Ball Aerospace is building and testing the spacecraft and photometer for the Kepler mission. Planned for a 2008 launch, Kepler’s science goals are to seek out habitable planets around distant stars.

First spacecraft to provide mapping of the Earth’s total ice volume
Under its Rapid Spacecraft Development program, NASA selected Ball Aerospace to build the ICESat spacecraft. ICESat uses the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System to measure changes in the thickness of ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland.

First optical system expected to study objects 400 times more faint than any current telescope
Ball Aerospace is developing the advanced optical technology and lightweight mirror system at the heart of the James Webb Space Telescope.

First spacecraft designed for on-orbit, autonomous servicing
Ball Aerospace built the Next Generation Satellite and Commodities spacecraft (NEXTSat/CSC), its ground support equipment, and participated in launch and mission operations. The spacecraft is part of the Orbital Express Advanced Technology Demonstration Program intended to prove techniques for on-orbit refueling, reconfiguration and repair of spacecraft in orbit.




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