Career as a USAF Space Systems Operator

Senior Airman Nayibe Ramos runs through a checklist during Global Positioning System satellite operations

United States Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Mike Meares)
 / Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Do you stare up at the stars like an angsty young (rebooted) Captain Kirk? Sure, becoming a NASA astronaut in the military is a rare opportunity, and maybe your long-term goals don’t otherwise include the officer’s commission, pilot’s wings, or doctoral thesis commonly found on an astronaut’s resume. That doesn’t mean that your goals have to stop at the lower atmosphere. On the enlisted side, the Air Force maintains a cadre of Space Systems Operators that support both military and national goals beyond the clouds.

Duties and Responsibilities

Space Systems Operators are split up until several functional areas depending on their duty assignment, but all support Air Force space-related missions via console, similar to the work of an air traffic controller.

Some may begin their careers detecting and deterring intercontinental missile launches, a space-centric discipline but with a decidedly military focus. Others work with satellite communications: maintaining the Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) system, disrupting enemy satellite communications, or keeping US satellites in their proper orbits and trajectories. Some operators also handle “command and control functions at...agencies such as the Joint Space Operations Center...Missile Warning Center, and NORAD/NORTHCOM Command Center.” (Air Force Credentialing and Education Research Tool.)

Then there are range operations overseeing space launches. The manned space program at NASA may be on the backburner, but that’s not stopping the US from launching missiles, satellites, and unmanned vehicles into the great unknown. Airmen in range operations don’t just work with the Air Force, either: According to their Enlisted Classification Manual, they also support “in-flight hardware processing and satellite launch operations for DoD [Department of Defense], NASA, and commercial users.”

Military Requirements

Space Systems Operators need to meet medical qualifications for space operations, which include normal color vision, hearing, and equilibrium; absence of chronic migraines, epilepsy, or psychological conditions such as claustrophobia; and preclude those with regularly prescribed medications that “affect alertness, judgment, cognition, special sensory function, mood or coordination,” according to the Air Force Instruction on Medical Examinations and Standards.

Candidates must also pass a background check with eligibility for at least a Secret-level security clearance. Although not required, high school work in physics, geometry, trigonometry, algebra, and computer science are all considered helpful primers by the authors of the Enlisted Classification Manual.

Education

Preparation for a career in Space Systems Operations begins at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, following basic training. All airmen start with Space 100, a month-long primer on the whole space operations career field, covering “launch, missile, warning, and safety.” The course, described by some as more challenging due to its breakneck pace than its content, leaves students ready for follow-on training specific to their first duty assignment. These follow-on courses vary in length and prepare airmen for assignments such as space lift operations, missile detection, and satellites.

Certifications

Although the Community College of the Air Force (CCAF) Credentialing and Education Research Tool comes up pretty scarce on suggestions (just two professional management certifications), it does advertise CCAF’s optional degree program for Air and Space Operations Technology.

Career Outlook

Word among self-professed veterans of Space Systems Operations on the Military.com forums is that there’s mobility between different specializations--missile surveillance, range operations, etc.--but that constant retraining is the key to qualifying for new assignments and staying on the cutting edge of Air Force space ops. The variety of duties and mobility between assignments is a positive counterbalance to the fact that, according to these same veteran operators, the work tends to take the form of long shifts windowless rooms (hence the medical standards singling out claustrophobics.)

Beyond the Air Force, successful duty in Space Systems Operations has the apparent advantage of your security clearance. Civilian careers that require experience with security, radar, and mission management are prime targets.

Unfortunately, America’s switch to a privatized model for manned spaceflight has pained a lot of NASA employees on the “space coast,” according to Payscale.com. This seems like a bad omen, but some of the trouble may stem from: (a) workers who won’t relocate or are facing a late-life career change and (b) the fact that this is (hopefully) just the rocky start of a new stage in the industry. For those with galactic-sized ambitions, the privatization model will hopefully develop new and more jobs in the civilian sector as this industry gets off its feet--a prime place to go after starting off as a Space Systems Operator in the Air Force.