In This Section

  • SpaceX Aims To Conduct Next Starlink Launch January 20 SpaceX Aims To Conduct Next Starlink Launch January 20

    15 January 2020

    Spaceflight Now reports that SpaceX “plans to launch its next group of Starlink broadband satellites aboard a Falcon 9 rocket as soon as Monday, Jan. 20.” The launch comes shortly after it is scheduled to test its Crew Dragon’s “emergency escape system.” SpaceX’s “ability to achieve back-to-back launch schedule hinges on several factors, including an

  • MIT Researchers Develop Carbon Nanotube Method For Aerospace-Grade Composites MIT Researchers Develop Carbon Nanotube Method For Aerospace-Grade Composites

    15 January 2020

    Aviation International News reports that engineers at MIT “have developed a method to use carbon nanotubes to produce aerospace-grade composites without an autoclave,” according to a paper published in the journal Advanced Materials Interfaces. MIT Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics Brian Wardle said, “If you’re making a primary structure like a fuselage or wing, you

  • Airbus BelugaXL Begins Service Airbus BelugaXL Begins Service

    14 January 2020

    Aviation International News reports that Airbus announced Monday that the first BelugaXL air transport has entered service. Furthermore, Airbus “plans to introduce a further five BelugaXLs by 2023, providing the European airframer the much-needed extra transport capacity it needs to support the ongoing production ramp-up of its commercial aircraft programs.” The BelugaXL “will carry complete

  • UAVs Offer Solutions For Last-Mile Deliveries, But Regulatory, Technology Challenges Remain UAVs Offer Solutions For Last-Mile Deliveries, But Regulatory, Technology Challenges Remain

    14 January 2020

    Transport Topics reports that aerial UAVs “are emerging as a way to help solve challenges associated with last-mile deliveries in a number of conditions and environments.” FedEx Express SVP of Global Engineering and Transformation Joe Stephens said, “We believe autonomous innovations will provide a number of opportunities for the shipping and logistics industry. It will

  • Former NASA Deputy Administrator Garver Argues Agency Should Focus On Climate Change Former NASA Deputy Administrator Garver Argues Agency Should Focus On Climate Change

    13 January 2020

    Aerospace America reported that during the AIAA SciTech Forum, Earthrise Alliance CEO Lori Garver argued that “climate change should be [NASA’s] top priority.” Garver said that “NASA’s Earth science satellites and scientists do not exist just ‘to show you a pretty picture,’” but instead should be used to “maintain the integrity of the Earth’s atmosphere.”

  • Bell V-280 Completes Autonomous Test Flight Bell V-280 Completes Autonomous Test Flight

    13 January 2020

    Aviation Today reported that Bell’s “V-280 Valor tiltrotor aircraft completed a successful autonomous test flight in December” while the company awaits “an Army downselect decision in March to continue forward in the Future Long Range Assault Aircraft program.” Bell V-280 Program Manager Ryan Ehinger “said the technology demonstrator aircraft performed the full range of autonomous flight

  • NASA To Decide Whether To Require Additional Boeing Starliner Test Flight NASA To Decide Whether To Require Additional Boeing Starliner Test Flight

    10 January 2020

    The Washington Post reports that following December’s failed Boeing Starliner test, NASA must decide whether it will “require the company to repeat the uncrewed test flight or” whether it will “allow the next flight to proceed, as originally planned, with astronauts aboard.” Requiring The Boeing Company “to redo the test flight without anyone aboard would be costly,

  • Airbus To Expand A320 Production At Alabama Plant Airbus To Expand A320 Production At Alabama Plant

    10 January 2020

    The AP reports that Airbus announced Thursday that it will “expand production at its plant on the U.S. Gulf Coast in Alabama, where it will spend $40 million to construct new facilities and add 275 jobs.” The plan will involve increasing production at the Mobile, Alabama, factory “to seven airplanes monthly by early next year.” Full

  • AIAA and Blue Origin Partner  to Launch Experiments Designed by High School Students into Space AIAA and Blue Origin Partner to Launch Experiments Designed by High School Students into Space

    9 January 2020

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] January 9, 2020 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and Blue Origin have partnered to create Design/Build/Launch (DBL), a new competition designed to launch experimental payloads to study the effects of short-duration microgravity. AIAA and Blue Origin invite high school students to

  • China’s Ehang Tests Pilotless Air Taxi In US For The First Time China’s Ehang Tests Pilotless Air Taxi In US For The First Time

    9 January 2020

    The Verge reports that Chinese UAV maker Ehang displayed its autonomous taxi for the first time in the US in a demonstration south of Raleigh, North Carolina Tuesday afternoon, “with approximately 100 people, including the state’s governor, Roy Cooper, looking on.” The all-electric two-seater Ehang 216 “flew along a pre-planned route at over 80 mph.”

  • Virgin Galactic Unity Spacecraft Reaches Structural Completion Virgin Galactic Unity Spacecraft Reaches Structural Completion

    9 January 2020

    The AP reports that Virgin Galactic announced Wednesday that its Virgin Space Ship Unity spacecraft has accomplished the “Weight On Wheels” achievement. This means that “all major structural elements have been assembled and the rocket plane is standing on its own landing gear.” Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides said, “We now have two spaceships which are structurally

  • NASA, Boeing Set Up Joint Investigation Of Starliner Test Flight NASA, Boeing Set Up Joint Investigation Of Starliner Test Flight

    8 January 2020

    Reuters reports that NASA announced Tuesday that it “is opening an independent investigation with [The Boeing Company] over a software glitch that prevented its unmanned astronaut capsule from reaching the International Space Station in December.” NASA said that the “investigative team” will “‘provide corrective actions’ needed before Starliner can fly a crew of astronauts for the

  • SpaceX Crew Dragon IFA Delayed Until No Earlier Than January 18 SpaceX Crew Dragon IFA Delayed Until No Earlier Than January 18

    8 January 2020

    SPACE reports that NASA announced Monday that SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule’s “crucial in-flight abort test, or IFA, which had been targeted for Jan. 11, will now take place no earlier than Jan. 18.” NASA “officials wrote in an update” that the “new date allows additional time for spacecraft processing.” The IFA “is the last big

  • FAA, FBI, Air Force Form Task Force With Local Authorities In Mystery UAV Case FAA, FBI, Air Force Form Task Force With Local Authorities In Mystery UAV Case

    7 January 2020

    CBS News reports on its website that on Monday, “dozens of agencies met and established a task force with the FBI, FAA and the Air Force” in an effort to solve the mystery of UAVs flying over Nebrasak and Colorado. However, “they’re no closer to an answer.” Full Story (CBS News)

  • FAA Yet To Determine Root Cause Of Airbus A380 Fan-Blade Fracture FAA Yet To Determine Root Cause Of Airbus A380 Fan-Blade Fracture

    7 January 2020

    FlightGlobal reports that the FAA has “yet to establish the root cause of a fan-blade fracture involved in an engine failure affecting an Air France Airbus A380.” In a directive, the FAA indicates that “after an analysis of these fractures, the manufacturer determined the fan blades experienced cracks that originated on the internal surface of

  • CASC Plans Over 40 Launches For 2020 CASC Plans Over 40 Launches For 2020

    6 January 2020

    Space News reported that China’s “main space contractor,” the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), “is aiming to carry out more than 40 launches in 2020, including lunar, interplanetary and space infrastructure missions.” CASC said January 2 that “its major goals include completing the Beidou navigation satellite system, launching missions to Mars and a lunar

  • FAA, Boeing Examining Wiring On 737 MAX FAA, Boeing Examining Wiring On 737 MAX

    6 January 2020

    Reuters reports that The Boeing Company and the FAA are looking into a “wiring issue that could potentially cause a short circuit on the grounded 737 MAX.” Boeing Vice President for Government Operations Communications Gordan Johndroe said that the company “identified this issue as part of [a] rigorous process, and we are working with the FAA

  • UAVs Over Colorado, Nebraska Remain Unexplained As FAA Investigates UAVs Over Colorado, Nebraska Remain Unexplained As FAA Investigates

    3 January 2020

    The Washington Post reports that the UAVs flying in groups after dark in Colorado and Nebraska “have dominated headlines in local newspapers” and “fueled intense speculation on social media and unsettled residents” over the past several weeks, but that they “remain a mystery.” Theories about them range from “government surveillance and alien activity” to “less-nefarious explanations”

  • Four Different Mars Missions Planned For Launch In 2020 Four Different Mars Missions Planned For Launch In 2020

    3 January 2020

    The Daily Mail (UK) reports that there are four “major missions bound for Mars this year” from the USA, Europe, China and the UAE. NASA “is launching the Mars 2020 Rover and the Mars Helicopter Scout to gather rock samples for an eventual return to Earth.” A joint European Space Agency and Russian Space Agency mission

  • US Astronaut Sets Record For Longest Space Flight By A Woman US Astronaut Sets Record For Longest Space Flight By A Woman

    2 January 2020

    The AP reported that on Saturday, US Astronaut Christina Koch “set a record…for the longest single spaceflight by a woman, breaking the old mark of 288 days with about two months left in her mission.” Koch is “expected to spend a total of 328 days, or nearly 11 months, on board the space station before returning

  • Commercial Plane Crash Deaths Dropped 50% In 2019 Commercial Plane Crash Deaths Dropped 50% In 2019

    2 January 2020

    Reuters reports that Dutch aviation consulting firm To70 said that 87 accidents involving large commercial planes around the world in 2019 resulted in 257 fatalities, a significant drop from the 160 accidents and 534 deaths in 2018. While the aviation industry focused “on so-called ‘future threats’ such as drones,” the crashes involving the 737 MAX “are

  • AIAA Statement on Explosion at Beechcraft Manufacturing Facility in Kansas AIAA Statement on Explosion at Beechcraft Manufacturing Facility in Kansas

    30 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] December 30, 2019 – Reston, Va. – Along with the rest of the aerospace community, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) wishes a speedy recovery to the more than a dozen workers injured on 27 December when a nitrogen line ruptured at the Beechcraft aircraft manufacturing

  • AIAA Statement on FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act AIAA Statement on FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act

    20 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] AIAA Executive Director Applauds the Renewed Focus on National Security Space December 20, 2019 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) applauds the passage of the FY2020 National Defense Authorization Act. Among other things, the $738 billion policy bill establishes a U.S. Space

  • AIAA Welcomes Passage of FY2020 Appropriations Package AIAA Welcomes Passage of FY2020 Appropriations Package

    20 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] Executive Director Praises Funding Levels for Aerospace Programs and Reauthorization of the EXIM Bank, Calls on Congress to Return to Regular Order December 20, 2019 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) applauds the passage of the $1.4 trillion appropriations package for Fiscal

  • Air Force Awards Start-Up Contract To Detect Hypersonic Vehicles In Space Air Force Awards Start-Up Contract To Detect Hypersonic Vehicles In Space

    20 December 2019

    Space News reports that start-up Rhea Space Activity (RSA) and “partner” Lunar Resources have developed “a concept to deploy two spacecraft to manufacture a large mirror in space.” According to RSA founder Shawn Usman, the mirror “would be installed, in orbit, into a telescope that would be used to detect hypersonic vehicles.” At a “Space Pitch

  • Rolls-Royce Unveils Initial Version Of Single Seat Electric Plane Rolls-Royce Unveils Initial Version Of Single Seat Electric Plane

    20 December 2019

    Reuters reports that Rolls-Royce “unveiled” a “one-seater electric aircraft on Thursday it hopes will fly in late Spring next year and become the world’s fastest all-electric aircraft.” The aircraft is being built in conjunction with YASA and Electroflight, and “will target a speed of over 300 miles per hour.” It has “the most power-dense battery

  • In 2020, Air Force Plans To Launch Nine Small Space Missions In 2020, Air Force Plans To Launch Nine Small Space Missions

    19 December 2019

    Space News reports that the Air Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center “is preparing to launch nine missions in 2020, more [than] doubling the number of launches conducted in 2019.” The missions will include a “National Reconnaissance mission, NROL-129” aboard “a Northrop Grumman Minotaur 4 launch vehicle” and an “Air Force Research Lab experimental payload”

  • Airbus Expected To End 2019 With 20% Increase In Deliveries Relative To Last Year Airbus Expected To End 2019 With 20% Increase In Deliveries Relative To Last Year

    19 December 2019

    Reuters reports that based on statements made by Chief Commercial Officer Christian Scherer, Airbus “is on course to end 2019 with a rise in its order backlog” thanks to “netting more sales than deliveries across its major products.” Airbus “is expected” to beat The Boeing Company in both orders and deliveries this year. This has

  • NASA Approves Final Assembly Of QueSST Plane NASA Approves Final Assembly Of QueSST Plane

    18 December 2019

    CNET News reports that on Monday, NASA “approved final assembly” of the “X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) plane – also known as the Low Boom Flight Demonstrator.” The plane, “built in partnership with Lockheed Martin,” is “designed the break the sound barrier without the thunderous noise.” It is scheduled to make its first flight in 2021.

  • Boeing Starliner Moves Toward Friday Launch Boeing Starliner Moves Toward Friday Launch

    18 December 2019

    CBS News reports that The Boeing Company’s Starliner capsule “is on track for launch Friday” to the ISS, according to “mission managers.” Boeing Starliner Program Manager John Mulholland said, “We are actually tracking no spacecraft anomalies right now. The spacecraft is in really good shape.” The Starliner capsule will be atop a United Launch Alliance

  • Boeing to Suspend 737 MAX Production Boeing to Suspend 737 MAX Production

    17 December 2019

    Fox Business reports Monday that The Boeing Company will “temporarily halt production of its 737 MAX jetliner in January … escalating the crisis confronting the aerospace giant and raising the prospect of job cuts and furloughs across the global aerospace industry.” The decision by Boeing to suspend production “is likely to reverberate throughout the U.S.

  • Navy Memo On DJI UAVs Noted Cheap Cost, Risks Navy Memo On DJI UAVs Noted Cheap Cost, Risks

    17 December 2019

    C4ISR & Networks reports that a recently obtained Navy memo “warns of a range of cyber vulnerabilities inherent in the [UAV] system, and offers a range of mitigation strategies.” Obtained by the National Security Archive through a FOIA request, the Navy memo “is housed online as part of the NSArchive’s Cyber Vault project.” Titled “Operation Risks

  • SpaceX Successfully Launches JCSAT-18/Kacific 1 Satellite Via Falcon 9 Rocket SpaceX Successfully Launches JCSAT-18/Kacific 1 Satellite Via Falcon 9 Rocket

    17 December 2019

    CBS News reports that on Monday, SpaceX successfully launched a Falcon 9 rocket “boost[ing] the Boeing-built JCSAT-18/Kacific 1 satellite into space.” After “boosting the vehicle out of the dense lower atmosphere,” the Falcon 9 rocket achieved “an on-target touchdown aboard a SpaceX droneship” – eight and a half minutes after launch. After having reached “elliptical

  • AIAA Region VII Student Paper Conference Winners Announced AIAA Region VII Student Paper Conference Winners Announced

    17 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] December 17, 2019 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics has announced the winners of the AIAA Region VII Student Paper Conference, which was held in Australia this month. “For many undergraduates, an AIAA student conference is the first time they’ve had their research

  • NASA Officials Promise To Continue Artemis Program Regardless Of Budget NASA Officials Promise To Continue Artemis Program Regardless Of Budget

    16 December 2019

    Space News reported that “NASA leadership” is working on keeping its plan to return humans to the moon by 2024 “on track even if the agency doesn’t get all the funding it’s requested.” While current House and Senate funding bills would provide NASA with funding similar to the $21 billion it originally requested, neither bill

  • Boeing Considering Suspending Production Of 737 Max Boeing Considering Suspending Production Of 737 Max

    16 December 2019

    The Wall Street Journal reports that according to people familiar with the matter, The Boeing Company is considering either suspending or cutting back on the production of its 737 Max. Company management reportedly believes that temporarily halting production is the most viable among a variety of difficult options. A production cut would cause an inflation in

  • Boeing Confirms 737 MAX Approval Will Not Happen In 2019 Boeing Confirms 737 MAX Approval Will Not Happen In 2019

    13 December 2019

    Reuters reports that The Boeing Company announced Thursday that it no longer expects the 737 MAX to be approved by regulators in 2019. The announcement comes on the heels of a meeting between Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg and FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson. Dickson had said Wednesday that the FAA would not lift its grounding of

  • NASA Selects Landing Site For OSIRIS-REx Spacecraft On Asteroid NASA Selects Landing Site For OSIRIS-REx Spacecraft On Asteroid

    13 December 2019

    The New York Times reports that on Thursday at the American Geophysical Union Conference, NASA announced that “after a difficult year of mapping” the surface of asteroid Bennu, it had located a target landing site for the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. Mission principal investigator Dante Lauretta said, “We made our final decision based on which site has the greatest

  • India’s 50th Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle Sends Satellites from Five Nations into Orbit India’s 50th Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle Sends Satellites from Five Nations into Orbit

    12 December 2019

    Spaceflight Now reports that on Wednesday, India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) sent “10 spacecraft from five nations into orbit” from “the Satish Dhawan Space Center, a spaceport located on Sriharikota Island on India’s southeastern coast with the Bay of Bengal.” The payload included “a new Indian radar surveillance platform and a batch of small

  • FAA Administrator Dickson Testifies Before House Committee FAA Administrator Dickson Testifies Before House Committee

    12 December 2019

    Aerospace America reports that Wednesday’s House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee hearing revealed that a “previously unreleased FAA analysis completed after the crash in Indonesia of a Boeing MAX 737…warned of ‘as many as 15 future crashes within the life of the fleet,” according to Committee Chair Peter DeFazio (D-OR). FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson, testifying at the

  • AIAA-sponsored High School Students’ Experiment Launched to Space by Blue Origin New Shepherd Rocket AIAA-sponsored High School Students’ Experiment Launched to Space by Blue Origin New Shepherd Rocket

    11 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] December 11, 2019 – Reston, Va. – Three high school students from the Seattle area will experience what most people only dream of—to have their experiment launched into space Wednesday at 12:55 p.m. EST as part of the Blue Origin New Shepherd payload. The American Institute of Aeronautics and

  • FAA To Create New Branch In Response To 737 MAX Crashes FAA To Create New Branch In Response To 737 MAX Crashes

    11 December 2019

    The Washington (DC) Post reports that Mel Johnson, Deputy Director of Policy and Innovation for the FAA’s Aircraft Certification Service, sent an internal email to employees in the FAA’s Aircraft Certification Service. The email said that the FAA will create an Aircraft Certification Safety Program Management Branch. While the email “does not mention the Max directly,”

  • NASA Optimistic SpaceX, Boeing Will Conduct Crewed Test Flights Next Year NASA Optimistic SpaceX, Boeing Will Conduct Crewed Test Flights Next Year

    11 December 2019

    Forbes contributor Elizabeth Howell reports that NASA “is optimistic astronaut test flights” could occur early next year as a part of 2014 contracts which SpaceX and The Boeing Company signed to “develop commercial crew spacecraft.” Boeing’s Starliner is expected to conduct an uncrewed test flight on December 20 while SpaceX previously sent “an uncrewed Crew Dragon”

  • Call for Content Issued for AIAA’s New Space Conference ASCEND Call for Content Issued for AIAA’s New Space Conference ASCEND

    11 December 2019

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] December 11, 2019 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) has issued a Call for Content for ASCEND, a new outcomes-focused, transdisciplinary conference dedicated to the space economy. ASCEND, happening 16–18 November 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada, will focus on three macro themes:

  • NASA’s New Space Launch System Could Cost $1.6 Billion Per Launch NASA’s New Space Launch System Could Cost $1.6 Billion Per Launch

    10 December 2019

    CNN reports that “after nearly a decade of funneling money into a project…that NASA hopes will return astronauts to the moon, the launch vehicle is finally assembled and ready for testing.” However, “the rocket, called SLS or Space Launch System, is still haunted by critiques of long delays and cost overruns.” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine

  • DHS Warns Private Industry Not To Use Foreign-Made UAS DHS Warns Private Industry Not To Use Foreign-Made UAS

    10 December 2019

    Aviation Today reports that DHS cybersecurity officials “continue to warn US companies about the dangers of using [UAS] designed or manufactured abroad, according to a sensitive document distributed to private industry by the FBI’s Cyber and Infrastructure Security Agency on November 20.” The private industry bulletin “warns companies that they risk the exposure of private data

  • ISS Spacewalks Delayed To 2020 ISS Spacewalks Delayed To 2020

    9 December 2019

    Aviation Week reported that “plans for International Space Station…astronauts to conduct three high-priority spacewalks before year’s end appear to be slipping into 2020.” The planned spacewalks are the final “two excursions” as part of “a series of four spacewalks to upgrade the orbiting science lab’s $2 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS).” Amid “the busy pace of

  • Boeing Starliner Test Delayed To December 20 Boeing Starliner Test Delayed To December 20

    9 December 2019

    SPACE reported that The Boeing Company’s “first uncrewed test flight of its Starliner spacecraft for astronauts is now set for no earlier than Dec. 20, one day later than planned.” In a statement December 6, United Launch Alliance (ULA) representatives said, “We successfully conducted a wet dress rehearsal (WDR), a critical pre-launch milestone, on Friday.” The

  • Virgin Galactic CEO Details Yearly Progress Virgin Galactic CEO Details Yearly Progress

    6 December 2019

    The AP reports that on Thursday, Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides indicated that “Virgin Galactic is on the verge of making more history in 2020 following an ‘incredible’ year of progress.” Whitesides said that after a busy year, which included the company’s IPO debut on the NYSE, “now hopefully you can start enjoying the benefits of having

  • USAF Projects Increased Launch Activity For 2020 USAF Projects Increased Launch Activity For 2020

    6 December 2019

    Space News reports that the U.S. Air Force projects, at a minimum, a two-fold increase in the number national security launches in 2020 versus in 2019. Air Force Space Command Director of the Launch Systems Enterprise Directorate Col. Robert Bongiovi said Thursday, “It’s really going to be an exciting year.” He added, “We could have