Behind an industrial building on the edge of the small airport of the modest city of Santa Maria, California, sits an oddly-shaped black-painted object, about three meters high and two meters in diameter. It is not labeled, but at one time it went by the nickname “Pathfinder.” It is leftover equipment from the Cold War, and a case of a secret program hiding in plain sight.
The object sits next to a piece of a Titan II rocket, which provides a clue about its provenance. The object is a crude mockup of a late 1980s Program 989 signals intelligence satellite codenamed FARRAH, designed to collect Soviet radar signals and relay their identity and location to ground stations, including US Army units deployed around the world. It has been sitting outside in the weather for decades, with perhaps only a handful of visitors ever knowing its actual purpose. No photos of the actual satellite have been released, but now a drawing of the satellite has also been declassified, and it looks like the object in Santa Maria.