SPEAKING OF TECHNOLOGY SPEAKER: The Outer Sphere Technology company announced that it is planning to launch its first satellite in 2018.
The company has developed a constellation of satellite systems that can be used for communication, navigation and other satellite services.
Its new satellite is named the Outer Sphere, and it will be launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
“We are very excited to be able to launch this satellite into space and to bring it to the Outer Sphere,” said Outer Sphere CEO and CEO Robert B. Johnson.
Nathan J. Linder, an analyst at IBISWorld, said that the Outer Space Technology company is the first satellite to launch from the Vandenberg base.
It will be used to carry out navigation and communications services to the outer planets, including the Moon, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn, Linder said.
According to the company, the Outer Sun is in the process of being “buffed” and that the inner solar system is in “the throes of its most important interplanetary exploration since the days of the Apollo program.”
“The Outer Sun has the potential to be one of the first worlds to experience the benefits of our new technologies, as well as to be a gateway to other worlds beyond our solar system,” Johnson said in a statement.
Inner Sphere Technology’s new satellite will be the company’s first attempt to reach outer space, according to the statement.
The company has been exploring the possibility of sending satellites into outer space for years.
In February, Inner Sphere announced that the company had successfully launched its first CubeSat, an unmanned satellite, into orbit.
That satellite will carry a small payload to orbit for the company to collect data from the Sun.
(Image Credit: Outer Sphere) The satellite will launch on March 9, 2019 from Vandenburg Air Force base, and the company expects the satellite to arrive at the Outer World in 2021.
To learn more about Outer Sphere Technologies and to learn more on the Outer Science Society website, visit: www.outer-space-tech.com/news.
Sources: Sphere.com, ABC News, Business Insider, Wall Street Journal