ExoTerra Resource (now Voyager Technologies)¶
Type: Startup → acquired Location: Littleton, CO Founded: ~2012 (earliest TechPort project is 2013 SBIR) Product: Halo Hall-effect thruster → Iris250 propulsion module → Courier 12U SEP bus Acquired: Oct 2025 by Voyager Technologies (NYSE: VOYG). Terms undisclosed. PI: Michael Vanwoerkom
Last updated: 2026-04-14 (session 35)
SST Project (1)¶
Courier Solar Electric Propulsion Module — 106825¶
- TRL: 5→8 (target) | Period: 2020-01 → 2026-09 | Status: Active
- Contract: 80ARC020C0002 (NASA Tipping Point), $1.74M
- 12U CubeSat combining compact Halo Hall-effect thruster, deployable fold-out solar array (>200W), radiation-hardened electronics. Provides >1 km/s delta-v for 22–220 kg microsatellites. Xenon or krypton propellant.
- Targeting LEO demo, but product has already shipped in volume for SDA constellation.
- No TechPort documents attached.
Full TechPort Footprint (13 projects across 3 programs)¶
ExoTerra spans SBIR/STTR (10), SST (1), NIAC (2) — one of the deepest multi-program lineages in the SST portfolio.
| Project | Program | TRL | Period | Topic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17736 | SBIR Phase I | 4 | ~2013 | SEP CubeSat bus for deep space |
| 16785 | SBIR Phase I | 3 | ~2014 | Microsatellite direct-drive SEP |
| 34096 | SBIR Phase I | 4 | ~2015 | CubeSat SEP power module (photovoltaic) |
| 90493 | SBIR Phase II | 7 | ~2016 | CubeSat SEP power module (power conversion) |
| 93531 | SBIR Phase I | 4 | ~2017 | High-power rad-tolerant CubeSat power |
| 88515 | NIAC Phase I | 2 | ~2017 | NIMPH: Nano Icy Moons Propellant Harvester |
| 94676 | SBIR Phase I | 5 | ~2018 | Modular Xe micro EP system |
| 102068 | SBIR Phase I | 4 | ~2019 | AMBEC: Advanced Micro Brayton energy conversion |
| 102358 | SBIR Phase II | 6 | ~2019 | Modular Xe micro EP system (Phase II) |
| 103053 | SBIR Phase I | 4 | ~2020 | SEP upper stage for small LVs |
| 106044 | NIAC Phase II | 2 | ~2020 | NIMPH Phase II |
| 106825 | SST | 5→8 | 2020→2026 | Courier SEP module (Tipping Point) |
| 113501 | SBIR Phase II | 6 | ~2021 | SEP upper stage Phase II |
Pattern: 7 years of SBIR-funded component maturation (thrusters, power, solar arrays) → SST Tipping Point for integrated system demo → defense production contracts.
Upstream Lineage¶
| Source | Detail | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| NASA SBIR pipeline (2013–2021) | 10 SBIR/STTR projects built the Halo thruster, power system, and solar arrays as separate components | confirmed (TechPort) |
| NIAC (2017–2020) | NIMPH concept — conceptual only, no visible tech transfer to propulsion products | confirmed (TechPort) |
| SST Tipping Point (2020) | $1.74M to integrate components into Courier 12U system | confirmed |
| USAF SBIR (2017) | $149.8K for 12U agile inspector CubeSat — early defense interest | confirmed (USASpending) |
Federal Funding Footprint¶
USASpending ($6.1M+ across 15 awards)¶
| Award ID | Agency | Amount | Period | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 80ARC020C0002 | NASA | $1.74M | 2020-01 → 2025-04 | Tipping Point — Courier SEP module |
| 80NSSC19C0224 | NASA | $1.50M | 2019-07 → 2021-08 | Modular Xe micro EP system (SBIR II) |
| 80NSSC21C0588 | NASA | $749.9K | 2021-08 → 2023-02 | SEP upper stage (SBIR II) |
| NNX16CC04C | NASA | $740.4K | 2016-05 → 2017-11 | CubeSat SEP power module (SBIR II) |
| NNH14CL72C | NASA | $300K | 2014-07 → 2015-01 | Multi-purpose SEP module for ARM |
| NNX15CA59P | NASA | $125K | 2015-06 → 2015-12 | High-power deployable solar arrays |
| 80NSSC18P2218 | NASA | $124.9K | 2018-07 → 2019-02 | CubeSat micro EP SBIR I |
| 80NSSC19C0323 | NASA | $124.9K | 2019-08 → 2020-02 | AMBEC micro Brayton |
| NNX14CM40P | NASA | $124.8K | 2014-06 → 2014-12 | CubeSat SEP (SBIR I) |
| 80NSSC20C0625 | NASA | $124.7K | 2020-08 → 2021-03 | SEP upper stage (SBIR I) |
| NNX17CP38P | NASA | $123.4K | 2017-06 → 2017-12 | Rad-tolerant PMAD module |
| NNX13CC62P | NASA | $124.9K | 2013-05 → 2013-11 | SEP deep-space bus (SBIR I) |
| FA865017P9223 | USAF | $149.8K | 2017-08 → 2018-05 | 12U agile inspector (SBIR I) |
| FA864920P0926 | USAF | $49.4K | 2020-03 → 2020-06 | High-power hosted payload study |
| 0001 | USAF | $47K | 2014-07 → 2015-01 | HOPS hosted payload study |
Direct federal total: ~$6.1M | NASA: ~$5.9M | DoD: ~$246K
Indirect Revenue (subcontracts, not visible in USASpending)¶
- York Space Systems / SDA Tranche 1: 21 Iris250 propulsion modules delivered (May 2025). York received SDA contract in 2022 for 42 Tranche 1 Transport Layer satellites. ExoTerra is subcontractor — revenue not directly visible but likely $10M+ based on production scale.
- SDA Tranche 2: Under contract for follow-on deliveries.
- Production ramp: 15→24 units/month target. $8M invested in production equipment, 100+ employees pre-acquisition.
Downstream Impact¶
Flight Heritage¶
- DARPA Blackjack ACES (June 2023): Halo thruster first orbital firing on Blackjack constellation spacecraft. Orbit maintenance and raising demonstrated. Confidence: confirmed (SpaceNews, ExoTerra press release).
- SDA Tranche 1 Transport Layer (Sept 2024 launches): 21 Iris250 modules on York Space Systems satellites. Direct-to-platform connectivity constellation. Confidence: confirmed (SpaceNews, Via Satellite).
- SDA Tranche 2: Under contract, first deliveries expected 2025. Confidence: confirmed (press).
Commercial Products¶
- Halo thruster: Miniaturized Hall-effect thruster (Xe/Kr). Proven on DARPA Blackjack.
- Halo 12: Larger variant.
- Iris250 propulsion module: Integrated unit delivering up to 250 kN·s impulse for microsatellites. The volume production product.
- Courier: 12U SEP bus with Halo + deployable solar arrays + rad-hard electronics. The SST-funded integrated system.
Acquisition & Defense Position¶
- Acquired by Voyager Technologies (Oct 2025, NYSE: VOYG). Voyager is positioning for Golden Dome missile defense program.
- Post-acquisition: Littleton facility expanded 8,000 → 40,000 sqft. Production capacity doubled as of Apr 2026, with plans to quadruple from pre-acquisition levels.
- ExoTerra/Voyager is now a production-scale propulsion supplier, not a development shop.
Voyager Technologies Parent — FY2025 Financials (session 35 update)¶
- FY2025 net sales: $166.4M (up 15% YoY). Five strategic acquisitions in FY2025 including ExoTerra + Estes Energetics.
- Record backlog: $265.6M entering 2026.
- 2026 revenue guidance: $225M–$255M (increased guidance, driven by backlog).
- ExoTerra's Iris250 / Halo product line is a key contributor to the propulsion segment, though Voyager does not break out ExoTerra revenue separately.
- Implication: ExoTerra went from ~$6M cumulative NASA funding (2013–2025) to being part of a $166M/yr defense company with $265M backlog in under 12 months post-acquisition. The SBIR-to-production pipeline is now embedded in publicly-traded defense infrastructure.
- Confidence: confirmed (Voyager Q4 2025 earnings, BusinessWire).
Publications¶
- NTRS: 0 citations found (ExoTerra's work is primarily defense/commercial, not published in NASA technical reports).
Assessment¶
Outcome category: commercialized | Confidence: confirmed
ExoTerra is the deepest SBIR-to-production pipeline in the SST portfolio. The lineage is textbook: 1. 2013–2018: 6 NASA SBIR Phase I awards build individual components (thrusters, power, solar arrays, electronics) 2. 2016–2021: 4 SBIR Phase II awards mature components to TRL 5–7 3. 2020: SST Tipping Point ($1.74M) integrates components into Courier system 4. 2023: DARPA Blackjack ACES provides first flight heritage 5. 2024: SDA Tranche 1 deliveries — from demo to production (21 units) 6. 2025: Voyager acquisition; production doubles 7. 2026: Golden Dome positioning; 200 employees, 40K sqft facility
What SST funded: The Tipping Point was the system integration step — taking 7 years of component SBIR R&D and packaging it into a flight-ready 12U module. SST was the bridge between SBIR component maturation and defense production contracts.
Surprise delta: The depth of the SBIR pipeline was unexpected. 10 SBIR/STTR projects over 8 years, all feeding into the same Halo/Courier product family. Plus 2 NIAC projects (NIMPH) that appear conceptually unrelated. This is the most NASA-dependent company in the portfolio — $5.9M in direct NASA funding, with SBIR as the sustained R&D lifeline. The defense revenue (SDA, DARPA, Golden Dome) dwarfs the NASA investment but wouldn't exist without it.
Compare to other acquisitions: - Tyvak → Lockheed Martin (SST bus provider → defense prime) - BCT → Raytheon (SST bus provider → defense prime) - ExoTerra → Voyager (SST propulsion → defense propulsion supplier)
ExoTerra is the propulsion version of the bus-provider acquisition pattern. All three share: NASA SBIR pipeline → SST demo → defense contracts → acquisition.
Session 35 update — parent company context: Voyager FY2025 revenue of $166.4M and $265.6M backlog entering 2026 provides the first quantitative measure of the defense-industrial outcome of the SST pipeline. ExoTerra's Littleton facility quadrupling capacity means the Halo/Iris250 product line is scaling to meet SDA Tranche 2+ demand. The $6M NASA SBIR investment is now generating returns embedded in a publicly-traded defense platform with $225–$255M projected 2026 revenue.
Related Pages¶
- Smallsat Propulsion — Hall-effect cluster
- Northrop Grumman / SSEP — another Hall thruster SST story (NASA-H71M → NGHT-1X)
- Defense-prime acquisition pattern — ExoTerra is the 4th SST company acquired
- Archetypes — SBIR-pipeline-to-acquisition archetype