True Anomaly is a startup transforming the way we protect U.S. assets in space. Founded by three former Space Force members, their technology stack will include training software and autonomous orbital pursuit vehicles for collecting data and gathering intelligence about spacecrafts in outer space. The mission of this innovative technology is to close the information gap between the U.S. and its adversaries and to increase security by investing in the right defense services.
To date, they have raised $30 million and have a direct-to-phase 2 SBIR grant from Space Systems Command. The company has a 35,000 square-foot facility in Denver and plans to launch two Jackals aboard the SpaceX Transporter-9 mission later this year. Jackals specialize in “uncooperative rendezvous and proximity operations” and can be used for in-orbit servicing, refueling, inspection and repairs among other use cases.
True Anomaly’s CEO, Evan Rogers, served 16 years as an officer in the U.S. Space Command. With his in-depth understanding of space warfare and the military, he is passionate about closing the information gap and making the investments necessary to defend our access to the space domain. He believes this is critical to ensure U.S. and its allies are not vulnerable in space, and it could very well prevent miscalculation and potential conflicts.
The idea of True Anomaly is to create an AI-powered command and control center with realistic combat conditions to train war fighters, as well as providing mission management. This state-of-the-art system is revolutionary, as it will utilize autonomous satellites to carry out the mission in space, allowing for improved training, recon, and data collection.
such a project could potentially rank highly in Google searches and bring immense value to the users.