All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Beyond Gravity, formerly Ruag Space, is an aerospace supplier with various products for satellites and launch vehicles.
Oliver Schiewe has 19 years of experience in the space industry, including time at RUAG Space in Switzerland.
Oliver Schiewe held past roles as Senior Vice President at RUAG Aerostructure Switzerland AG and RUAG Space Switzerland AG.
Beyond Gravity (formerly RUAG Space) developed GEORIX and delivered a geostationary navigation receiver and an antenna to Maxar in 2021.
Beyond Gravity legally renamed from RUAG Space on 2022-05-01.
RUAG Space has been operating on the market as Beyond Gravity since 2022-03-15.
Lynx Single Board Computer has 250 times more processing power than RUAG Space’s normal onboard computers, including those RUAG delivers for European Space Agency programs.
RUAG Space expects the Lynx single board computer to gain flight heritage around 2025.
RUAG Space has developed and produced separation systems at its site in Linköping, Sweden for around 40 years.
RUAG Space has developed and produced separation systems at its Linköping, Sweden site for around 40 years.
About four hours into flight at an altitude of 23,0 m, the RUAG Space dispenser deploys Galileo satellites into orbit by firing a pyrotechnic separation system.
RUAG Space partnered with the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre to deliver the LEORIX generation of GNSS navigation receivers for Low Earth Orbit missions.
RUAG Space built the satellite dispenser that serves as an interface between the Soyuz rocket and OneWeb satellites.
RUAG Space received its first order for satellite thermal protection at the start of 1991 for the ESA/NASA SOHO solar observatory.
RUAG Space has achieved a 100% success rate across all of its more than 1,000 satellite separations.
RUAG Space employs around 1,300 people across Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, Germany, the USA, and Finland to develop and manufacture products for satellites and launch vehicles for both the institutional and commercial space market.
The 34 OneWeb satellites were launched using a separation system on a dispenser manufactured by RUAG Space.
On Sunday, 2021-08-22 (Paris Time), 34 OneWeb internet satellites were separated from a Soyuz launch vehicle and placed into orbit using a dispenser from RUAG Space.
RUAG Space has been developing and producing Payload Adapter Systems for around 40 years.
RUAG Space received an order from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California to deliver a large satellite container and a multipurpose trolley worth approximately 2,000,000 EUR.