All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
The AAC Clyde Space order is a follow-on from the Satellite Applications Catapult IOD program (IOD-3 AMBER), for which AAC Clyde Space will deliver a 6U cubesat to the International Space Station for deployment in 2021.
AAC Clyde Space satellites being built for Eutelsat will use onboard propulsion for phasing, stationkeeping, and collision avoidance.
AAC Clyde Space selected South Africa as the base for AAC Space Africa because the country has an established space industry and a strong position in communication systems with highly skilled engineers and data scientists.
AAC Clyde Space will provide a standardized Sirius system as a qualification model in 2022-04-01 under a contract valued at 320,000 EUR.
AAC Clyde Space has been selected to deliver the Sirius Command and Data Handling system to a new client.
AAC Clyde Space acquired Omnisys, which develops weather sensors and instruments for space.
AAC Clyde Space entered into an $8,400,000 contract to deliver high-resolution, multi-band, hyperspectral data from space to Canadian Earth Observation company Wyvern Inc. over an initial four-year period with an intended start in mid-2022.
AAC Clyde Space designed and manufactured Scotland's original satellite, UKube-1, in 2014 in partnership with the UK Space Agency.
In March 2021 AAC Clyde Space agreed with Wyvern Inc. to secure the launch of three satellites into orbit in 2022 for the hyperspectral data service.
AAC Clyde Space will design, manufacture, and own three 6U EPIC satellites equipped with hyperspectral payloads under the agreement with Wyvern Inc.
AAC Clyde Space has launched 10 Glasgow-built satellites.
AAC Clyde Space received a 135 kUSD order to continue operating the SeaHawk-1 satellite from its Operations Center in Glasgow, Scotland for a further 12 months.
AAC Clyde Space initially focused operations on providing free access to all SeaHawk-1 data collected and processed from mid-April 2021 to the International Ocean Color Community.
SeaHawk-1 is operated from AAC Clyde Space’s Glasgow Operations Center with instrument data downloaded to NASA Wallops facility via the satellite’s X-band downlink.
AAC Clyde Space was formed in 2018 when Sweden’s AAC Microtec acquired Clyde Space of Scotland.
AAC Clyde Space won a £4.6 million order from Horizon Space Technologies for a full turn-key solution that includes two new smallsat launches, operations, and data delivery.
The two smallsats procured by Horizon Space Technologies from AAC Clyde Space will become part of the Amber™ constellation dedicated to delivering Maritime Domain Awareness intelligence data.
AAC Clyde Space’s Space Data as a Service division delivers data from space directly to customers.
SpaceQuest, AAC Clyde Space’s US subsidiary, received an order worth $550,000 (approx. SEK 4.6 million) for global navigation satellite systems receivers and antennas.
AAC Clyde Space will build the two satellites at its site in Glasgow, Scotland as part of a managed services contract worth 4.6 million British pounds.