In this interactive workshop, attendees take the role of satellite operators responsible for maritime domain awareness from a shared imaging and sensing spacecraft—collecting and interpreting intelligence across widely separated operating areas while links and onboard behavior remain under pressure.
Your spacecraft supports persistent surveillance. Imagery, geospatial context, and communications performance must remain operational long enough to deliver answers on demand. AIS and other external feeds are useful—but not infallible.
Your team knows contested RF and sensor ambiguity can distort the picture. When commanders need timely maritime intelligence, every collection pass and every downlink window counts.
The Orbital Intel mission rehearsal exercise (MRX) unfolds through a sequence of operational task orders.
Your mission begins with dense maritime traffic and suspicious behavior in a strategic chokepoint. It moves to change detection against a reference brief in a sensitive littoral region. Then you confront deliberate AIS dishonesty and silence — can your team fuse what the camera shows with what the data claims? Later, telemetry shifts: an onboard fault demands diagnosis and recovery, while downlink performance collapses under interference. Can you attribute the disruption, identify the co-orbital adversary, and recover service using disciplined frequency response?
Teams must sustain surveillance output as imagery interpretation, data fusion, subsystem health, and RF resilience are tested together.
Similar to a capture-the-flag challenge, participants score points by correctly answering imagery and AIS-fusion tasks, diagnosing the spacecraft fault, characterising interference, and restoring communications performance before situational awareness erodes.
This is not a simplified table-top exercise with stylised components. This is a real operational challenge. No passive observers. No slides. Just teams, telemetry, imagery, and a spacecraft that must keep delivering intelligence under progressive disruption.
Zendir simulations replicate systems-relevant satellite operations in an immersive orbital environment. Our high-fidelity digital twin platform gives participants a live–virtual–constructive (LVC) setting to develop skills through practical application.
Operational collection: tasking, imagery interpretation, and maritime intelligence-building
Multi-source validation: comparing the mission's AIS to the asset's sensor intel to find the discrepancy
Anomaly diagnosis: assessing telemetry to isolate subsystem faults
Mission recovery and resilience: recognising interference, mitigating impact, and restoring
This is a free workshop, but registration is limited.
Complete the EOI form below and we'll let you know as soon as registration opens.
These events are designed for independent operators, but Zendir works with organisations to deliver private MRX workshops. Get in touch with our team if you'd like to learn more.