Rocket Lab acquired Optical Support, Inc. (OSI), adding precision optical and optomechanical manufacturing capabilities to its expanding space systems portfolio. The deal strengthens Rocket Lab’s position as a vertically integrated prime contractor supporting U.S. national security and civil space missions.
OSI designs and manufactures custom high-precision optical and optomechanical instruments, including advanced lenses and integrated assemblies used in space protection, space domain awareness, missile warning, and tracking payloads. The Tucson, Arizona–based company provides end-to-end services spanning concept design, prototyping, CNC machining, optical alignment, cleanroom assembly, and environmental testing. OSI previously served as a key supplier to Geost, which Rocket Lab acquired in August 2025 and integrated into its Optical Systems division.
Rocket Lab said the acquisition enhances supply chain certainty and production scalability as it supports programs such as the Space Development Agency’s Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture (PWSA) and emerging initiatives including Golden Dome. OSI’s 22,000 sq/ft (approximately 2,043 square meters) facility and 20-person engineering team will integrate into Rocket Lab Optical Systems in Arizona. The company cited OSI’s contributions to programs including NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and U.S. defense and intelligence missions as validation of its technical depth.
• Acquisition target: Optical Support, Inc. (OSI), Tucson, Arizona
• Capabilities added: custom lenses, optomechanical assemblies, CNC machining, optical alignment, cleanroom integration, environmental testing
• Facilities: 22,000 sq/ft (≈2,043 m²) advanced machining and integration space
• Personnel added: 20 employees
• Strategic programs supported: SDA PWSA, Golden Dome, space domain awareness, missile warning
• Prior integration step: Geost acquisition in August 2025 forming Rocket Lab Optical Systems
• Market focus: national security, commercial constellations, civil space exploration
Sir Peter Beck, founder and CEO of Rocket Lab, said: “Optical systems play a large and vital role in gathering critical data for the most impactful space missions of today and the future, from deep space exploration and Earth observation to national security. The high performing technology behind many of those missions comes from the team at Optical Support, Inc. Welcoming them to Rocket Lab’s portfolio of advanced space systems is a strategic commitment to further strengthening our vertical integration for programs like the PWSA, while ensuring we can serve the expanding needs of the commercial and wider government constellation market.”
🌐 Analysis
Rocket Lab continues to build a vertically integrated national security supply chain following its August 2025 acquisition of Geost. By internalizing precision optics manufacturing, the company reduces dependency on third-party suppliers for electro-optical and infrared payload subsystems—critical components in proliferated LEO constellations and missile warning architectures.
The move also aligns with broader industry trends in defense space, where primes and emerging contractors consolidate specialized subsystem vendors to control cost, schedule, and classified production flows. As the SDA’s PWSA tranches ramp and U.S. missile warning and tracking architectures expand, in-house optical payload production could improve Rocket Lab’s competitive positioning against larger defense contractors with established vertically integrated sensor portfolios.
🌐 We’re tracking the latest developments in space infrastructure and satellite systems. Follow our ongoing coverage at: https://convergedigest.com/category/space



