In This Section
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AIAA Foundation Announces Engine Design Competition Winners
18 July 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: John Blacksten 703.264.7532 [email protected] July 18, 2018 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Foundation announced the winners of its 2017–2018 AIAA Foundation Engine Design Competition on July 11 at the AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum in Cincinnati, Ohio. The 2017–2018 Engine Design Competition’s goal was
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Space Industry Enthusiastic About Growth Of Small Satellite Sector
17 July 2018
Space News reports that space industry executives at the Farnborough Airshow “reacted enthusiastically to the news on Monday that the United Kingdom will invest in domestic spaceports.” The news is “especially good news for the burgeoning” small satellite industry, as more launch sites and vehicle choices will make it “possible to set up new constellations in
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Boeing Competes For “Scarce” Aerospace, Defense Workers
17 July 2018
In an article titled “Military Spending Is Up, But Aerospace And Defense Workers Are Scarce,” the New York Times reports that the “aviation and defense industries in Europe, Asia and the Americas” are “struggling to fill new positions created by increased military budgets.” The topic is cited as a likely source of discussion at this week’s Farnborough
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SpaceX Plans Nighttime Launch At Cape Canaveral This Sunday
16 July 2018
Florida Today reported that according to the newest US Air Force launch schedules, SpaceX plans to launch a Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Station between 1 a.m. and 6 a.m. EDT on Sunday, July 22. The rocket will carry the “Telstar 19 VANTAGE satellite for Canada-based Telesat from Launch Complex 40, though a precise
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Boeing KC-46A Clears Final Flight Tests
16 July 2018
The Wichita Business Journal reported that a team of Boeing Company and US Air Force personnel have “cleared the final flight tests required for first delivery of the KC-46A Pegasus tanker.” The first delivery of the tanker is planned for “late October, and will go to McConnell Air Force Base in Wichita.” According to Air Force Service
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Airbus Demonstrates A310’s Automatic Air-To-Air Refueling Capability
13 July 2018
Aviation International News reports that Airbus Defence and Space has “demonstrated automatic air-to-air refueling” of its A310 tanker prototype with a Royal Australian Air Force Airbus A330 transport. Airbus has previously demonstrated “automatic refueling of a fighter aircraft.” According to Airbus, the system requires no additional receiver equipment, and is intended to improve safety, reduce the
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Orbital ATK Cygnus Spacecraft To Depart ISS Sunday Morning
13 July 2018
Aviation International News reports that Airbus Defence and Space has “demonstrated automatic air-to-air refueling” of its A310 tanker prototype with a Royal Australian Air Force Airbus A330 transport. Airbus has previously demonstrated “automatic refueling of a fighter aircraft.” According to Airbus, the system requires no additional receiver equipment, and is intended to improve safety, reduce the
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Exponential Digital Technologies Are Transforming Aviation
12 July 2018
Exponential digital technologies are delivering increased value at less cost and rapidly revolutionizing the aviation industry, said Colin Parris, vice president for software research at GE Global Research, July 11 during the “Digital Transformation in Aviation Services” session at the 2018 AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum in Cincinnati. Parris said exponential characteristics exhibited by digital technology are helping
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The Future of Hypersonics
12 July 2018
The U.S. aerospace sector can encourage research to benefit the emerging and competitive field of military and even commercial hypersonic flight, a panel of executives and government officials said July 10 at the 2018 AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum in Cincinnati. Hypersonic weapons and military aircraft have been around for 60 years, but advancing the science requires new ways
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Aerospace Is Hiring for Now and the Future
11 July 2018
The aerospace industry is dealing with the tough problem of needing to reach out to elementary students to build the workforce pipeline while simultaneously hiring people right now, panelists said July 11 at the 2018 AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum in Cincinnati. The panelists discussed ways to tackle the issue during the “Workforce Challenges and Policy Initiatives to Support
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Additive Manufacturing Streamlines Processes for Manufacturers
11 July 2018
Additive manufacturing — a hot topic for the past several years — is transforming processes and business models for aerospace manufacturers, a panel of experts said July 11 during the “Additive Manufacturing” session at the 2018 AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum in Cincinnati. Christine Furstoss, vice president of engineering and technology at GE Additive, shared one example. “Additive can disrupt
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AeroVironment, JPL To Build NASA’s Mars Helicopter
6 July 2018
Aviation Today reports that AeroVironment announced it will collaborate with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to “build the agency’s Mars Helicopter planned to fly on Mars.” The helicopter will be part of NASA’s next Mars rover mission, planned for July 2020 to “demonstrate the viability and potential of heavier-than-air vehicles on the red planet.” AeroVironment displayed
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NASA Issues RFP For Second Mobile Launch Platform
6 July 2018
Space News reports that NASA has called for proposals to construct a “second mobile launch platform that will be used by an upgraded version of the Space Launch System [SLS] rocket starting in the early 2020s.” The NASA solicitation was issued June 29 for Mobile Launcher 2 (ML2), which will go through a “two-step process, starting
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Aerojet Rocketdyne Test-Fires AR-22 At Stennis Space Center
5 July 2018
The AP reported that Aerojet Rocketdyne test-fired its experimental AR-22 rocket engine Monday at NASA’s Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. The engine is designed to be part of a “reusable spacecraft that can launch into space repeatedly with a quick turnaround time.” The Phantom Express spacecraft is a “collaboration between the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Boeing
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US Army Plans To Test “Off-The-Shelf” UAVs For FTUAS
5 July 2018
Aviation Week reported that the US Army plans to acquire “multiple off-the-shelf air vehicles for operational demonstrations to inform requirements for the planned Future Tactical Unmanned Aircraft Systems (FTUAS) program.” A request for proposals (RFP) released July 2 details the Army’s intent to award multiple contracts with an estimated ceiling value of $78 million “following a
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Sierra Nevada Dream Chaser Nears Production
3 July 2018
Aerospace America interviews Sierra Nevada Corporation Space Systems head Mark Sirangelo at the company’s Colorado production facility about the development of the company’s Dream Chaser spacecraft. The Dream Chaser Cargo System is “about to be built on a brand-new manufacturing floor side by side with SNC’s pitch for the Lunar Orbital Platform-Gateway.” Full Story (Aerospace America, by
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US Navy’s $4.2 Billion V-22 Osprey Contract “Provides Program Stability” Through 2024
3 July 2018
FlightGlobal reports on the announcement that a Bell-Boeing joint venture has been awarded a $4.2 billion US Navy contract to produce 78 V-22 Osprey helicopters, the “third multiyear purchase of the VTOL aircraft.” The contract pays for 39 CMV-22B aircraft for the Navy, “34 MV-22B aircraft for the Marine Corps; 1 CV-22B for the Air Force;
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A3 Plans to Transition Vahana To Horizontal Flight For First Time
2 July 2018
Aerospace America reported that in August, Airbus’ A3 plans to transition a “full-scale prototype” of its unmanned Vahana aircraft from vertical to horizontal flight “for the first time.” The Alpha One prototype will accomplish this by “tilting its wings, which have electrically driven propellers distributed across them.” According to A3 CEO Rodin Lyasoff, A3 envisions Vahana
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NASA To Submit X-59 Spending Limit To Congress
2 July 2018
Aerospace America reported that NASA officials are preparing to submit funding and schedule commitments for its X-59 supersonic demonstrator aircraft to Congress in October. Agency officials expect to need “around $500 million to pay for construction and test flights” for the aircraft, and the spending commitment will “apply to future budgets needed to complete the project.”
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NASA’s New Aviation Era
29 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Rich Wahls, strategic technical adviser, Advanced Air Vehicles Program, NASA’s Langley Research Center; Robert Pearce, deputy associate administrator for strategy and acting director for Airspace Operations and Safety Program, NASA Headquarters; Peter Coen, project manager, Commercial Supersonic Technology Project, NASA; Jay Dryer, director, Advanced Air Vehicles Program; Davis Hackenberg, strategy adviser for urban
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The Future of Commercial Supersonic Flight
29 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Robbie Cowart, director, supersonic technology development, Gulfstream Aerospace Corp.; Mike Hinderberger, senior vice president of aircraft development, Aerion Corp.; David Richardson, director for air vehicle design and technology, Advanced Development Programs, Lockheed Martin; Blake Scholl, founder and CEO, Boom Supersonic; Kevin Welsh, executive director, Office of Environment and Energy, FAA by Tom Risen, Aerospace America Staff
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Drone Technology: Leading the Data Revolution
29 June 2018
Speaker: Anil Nanduri, vice president and general manager, Drone Group, Intel Corp. by Ben Iannotta, Aerospace America editor-in-chief Intel, the computer chipmaker and drone pioneer, plans to one day program its drones to automatically spot trouble, such as a rusted pipe in an oil refinery, and text an alert to a manager on the ground. Anil Nanduri, head
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Bell’s Thacker Outlines Mobility Strategy
28 June 2018
Speaker: Michael Thacker, executive vice president of technology and innovation, Bell by Ben Iannotta, Aerospace America editor-in-chief Empowering everyday commuters and other passengers to fly over urban areas will require groundbreaking research but also achieving consumer acceptance and finding the most efficient way possible to certify these aircraft for safety, said Bell’s innovation chief, Michael Thacker, June 28
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Startups Bet on Future of Aviation
28 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator John Tylko, chief innovation officer, Aurora Flight Sciences Corp; Andrew Gibson, president, Empirical Systems Aerospace Inc.; Bruce Holmes, vice president of digital aviation, SmartSky Networks LLC; Daniel Morris; director, REaKTOR Business Technology Innovation Center, National Institute of Aerospace; Kevin Noertker, CEO, Ampaire by Tom Risen, Aerospace America staff reporter (2017-2018) A group of executives described their strategies for
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US Army May Contribute Troops To Space Force
28 June 2018
Space News reports that the US Army may contribute personnel to the White House’s newly announced Space Force. Although it is expected that the new branch’s “ranks would be dominated by airmen,” Army soldiers “also would have a role” in the Space Force “by virtue of much they rely on military satellites in peacetime or in
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Skunk Works Head Discusses F-35’s Future At AIAA AVIATION Forum
28 June 2018
Aviation Today reports that Lockheed Martin Advanced Development Programs – also known as “Skunk Works” – head Jeff Babione spoke at the AIAA AVIATION Forum Tuesday on the F-35’s “controversial two-decade history and its path going forward.” Babione led the F-35 program until recently. One of the “most immediate upgrades coming to the F-35 is an
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Transatlantic Collaboration May Speed Up Safer, Greener, Faster Aviation
28 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator David Hills, senior partnership manager, Airbus Americas Inc.; Matej Andrejašič, head of aerodynamics, Pipistrel Vertical Solutions; Pier-Davide Ciampa, team lead, Multidisciplinary Design and Optimization, German Aerospace Center; Sebastiano Fumero, head of unit-aeronautics, Research and Innovation Directorate General, European Commission; Pablo Perez-Illana, program officer, Research and Innovation Directorate General, European Commission; Joeri De Ruytter,
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Political Challenges of Aviation
28 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator David Hills, vice president of research and technology, Airbus; Michael Huerta, senior adviser, Macquarie Holdings by Tom Risen, Aerospace America staff reporter (2017-2018) Michael Huerta, a former FAA administrator, emphasized the need for data sharing, international collaboration and public education to achieve the aviation industry’s common goal of safety June 27 during his “Aviation Transformation —
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Experts: Airspace Not Ready for Urban Air Mobility
27 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Donald W. Richardson, chief operating officer, Donrich Research Inc.; Gregory Bowles, vice president for global innovation and policy, General Aviation Manufacturers Association; Ravi Chaudhary, director for advanced programs and innovation, FAA Office of Commercial Space Transportation; Parimal H. Kopardekar, senior technologist, Air Transportation Systems, NASA’s Ames Research Center; Robert Pearce, acting director, Airspace
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FAA Part 23 Rewrite Transforms General Aviation to Meet New Demands
27 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Nicolas Borer, advanced air vehicle configurator technical lead, Aeronautics Systems Analysis Branch, NASA’s Langley Research Center; Ella Atkins, professor of aerospace engineering, University of Michigan; Anna Dietrich, co-founder, Terrafugia; Stephane Fymat, vice president of product management and marketing, BendixKing, Honeywell Aerospace; Zohaib Mian, senior autonomous systems architect, Mercedes-Bosch Autonomous Driving Project, Robert Bosch
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DHS Program Seeks To Acquire New UAV Sensor Packages
27 June 2018
Homeland Preparedness News reports that the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) is looking to equip UAVs “with different sensors other than cameras that may be useful in search-and-rescue, surveillance, active shooter response, hostage situations, and other scenarios.” The directorate has “launched a program” to acquire commercially available sensors, which will be
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Unprecedented Global Partnerships, Collaboration Fuels F-35 Program
26 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Graham Warwick, managing editor, Aviation Week and Space Technology; Eric Branyan, vice president, F-35 Supply Chain Management, Lockheed Martin; Declan Holland, vice president of U.S. business, BAE Systems Inc.; Frank Carus, vice president and F-35 program manager, Northrop Grumman Corp.; Thomas Johns, director, F135 Weapon System Integration, Military Engines, Pratt & Whitney; John
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Life in the F-35 ‘Fish Bowl’
26 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Juan J. Alonso, professor, Stanford University; Jeff Babione, vice president and general manager, Advanced Development Programs, Lockheed Martin by Ben Iannotta, Aerospace America editor-in-chief Lockheed Martin’s Jeff Babione challenged the audience of the “Evolution of the F-35” session June 26 at the 2018 AIAA AVIATION Forum in Atlanta to utter the first words that came to mind when
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How to Speed to Prototype
25 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Starr Ginn, deputy aeronautics research director, NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center; Charles “Chase” Ashton, senior engineer, AeroVironment Inc.; Scott Drennan, director of innovation, Bell; Steve Ericson, director of advanced design, The Spaceship Co.; Bob Morgan, director of research and development, Scaled Composites; Michael Swanson, chief engineer, Advanced Development Programs, Lockheed Martin by Michele McDonald,
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Disrupting Aircraft Design and Production
25 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Juan Alonso, professor of aeronautics and astronautics, Stanford University; Rodin Lyasoff, CEO, A^3 by Airbus; Jack O’Banion, vice president of strategy and customer requirements, Advanced Development Programs, Lockheed Martin; Pradeep Fernandes, managing director of disruptive horizons, Boeing HorizonX; Ilan Kroo, Thomas V. Jones professor of engineering, Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Stanford University
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Expert Advice from Venture Capitalists
25 June 2018
Panelists: Moderator Van Espahbodi, co-founder, managing partner, Starburst Aerospace Accelerator; Maryanna Saenko, principal, Khosla Ventures; Brian Schettler, managing director, Boeing HorizonX Ventures; Peter Truwit, associate, Seraph Group by Ben Iannotta, Aerospace America editor-in-chief Four venture capitalists at the 2018 AIAA AVIATION Forum in Atlanta gave a glimpse into their world — from the fiercely competitive pace of their business to
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US Air Force Plans To Replace UH-1N Huey
25 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that NASA has moved to a new phase of small UAV “detect-and-avoid testing” in which the agency’s Ikhana UAV will fly within the National Airspace System (NAS) without a chase aircraft following. A two-and-a-half-hour flight on June 12 “validated initial FAA standards for detect-and-avoid (DAA) systems developed by NASA and industry and extensively
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NASA, SpaceX Plan For Early Friday Launch Of Falcon 9 ISS Mission
25 June 2018
Florida Today reported that SpaceX and NASA are “still proceeding toward an early morning Friday launch from Cape Canaveral” of a Falcon 9 rocket to “deliver supplies, cargo and science to the ISS.” Launch teams are targeting a 5:42 a.m. EDT liftoff from Launch Complex 40, “which should arrive at the ISS around 5:30 a.m. on
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Blue Origin Expects To Sell Suborbital Flight Tickets Next Year
22 June 2018
Space News reports that according to Blue Origin Senior Vice President Rob Meyerson, the company expects to begin New Shepard orbital flights “soon” and plans to begin selling tickets for commercial flights next year. Speaking at the Amazon Web Services Public Sector Summit here, Meyerson announced Blue Origin’s plans to “start flying our first test passengers
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NASA Moves To Second Phase Of UAV Detect-And-Avoid Testing
22 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that NASA has moved to a new phase of small UAV “detect-and-avoid testing” in which the agency’s Ikhana UAV will fly within the National Airspace System (NAS) without a chase aircraft following. A two-and-a-half-hour flight on June 12 “validated initial FAA standards for detect-and-avoid (DAA) systems developed by NASA and industry and extensively
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AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum, July 9-11, Looks Ahead to Newest Technologies Shaping Industry
22 June 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: John Blacksten 703.264.7532 [email protected] June 22, 2018 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) will hold its 2018 AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum, the only international event to focus on aeronautics and space propulsion, on July 9-11, at the Duke Energy Convention Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. Some of
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China Potentially Preparing To Deorbit Tiangong-2 Lab
21 June 2018
Space News reports that China has lowered the orbit of its “Tiangong-2 space lab, likely in preparation for deorbiting the orbital facility and thus averting a similar scenario to the uncontrolled re-entry of Tiangong-1 earlier this year.” The Tiangong-2 was launched in September 2016 to test “advanced life support and refueling and resupply capabilities” in preparation
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Bell, Airbus Helicopters Interested In Japan’s AH-X Attack Helicopter Contest
21 June 2018
FlightGlobal reports that both Airbus Helicopters and Bell have expressed interest in participating in Tokyo’s “emerging AH-X attack helicopter contest.” Japan issued a request for information (RFI) in mid-May as it “begins the process of replacing” the country’s Bell AH-1S Cobra fleet. According to Flight Fleets Analyzer, 71 of the aircraft are still in service. Airbus
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40-Year Aerospace Veteran Paul H. Park Named as AIAA’s Editor-in-Chief of the Library of Flight Book Series
21 June 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: John Blacksten 703.264.7532 [email protected] June 20, 2018 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) announced today that Paul H. Park is the new editor-in-chief of the Library of Flight book series. Park is an Associate Fellow of AIAA and past recipient of the AIAA Aircraft Design Award. He is
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Bridenstine Affirms Support For New Space Policy Directive
20 June 2018
ExecutiveGov reports that NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has affirmed his agency’s support for the White House’s move to “enforce a new directive that seeks to increase the security and safety of US space systems.” According to Bridenstine’s statement, released Tuesday, Space Policy Directive-3 “builds on our continued progress implementing SPD-1, which is galvanizing American space leadership
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Boeing 737 MAX Setting “Industry Record” For Adoption
20 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that around 140 Boeing 737 MAX aircraft have been delivered to “almost 30 operators since its commercial debut 13 months ago,” and that the jet is “quickly setting an industry record for the fastest introduction ever of a new jet transport.” The “swiftly expanding fleet is easing into operation” with a “relatively trouble-free
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NASA Completes Flight Trials Of Gear And Flap Noise-Reduction Technology
19 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that NASA is analyzing noise data from “recently completed flight trials of a modified Gulfstream III at Armstrong Flight Research Center in California.” The tests ending in late April completed a “four-year program that initially investigated the aerodynamic efficiency of a shape-changing flexible flap.” The technology could “pave the way” for new noise-reduction
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Airbus “Studying Options” To Extend Range Of A321
19 June 2018
Bloomberg News reports that Airbus is considering options to “extend the range of its A321 narrowbody” ahead of a decision by The Boeing Company on “whether to push ahead with a competing model, according to a person familiar with the matter.” The A321 already has a “long-range variant” able to fly 4,000 nautical miles, and may
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Trump Promises “Space Force,” Takes On Space Debris
19 June 2018
Aerospace America reports that President Donald Trump on Monday opened the third meeting of his administration’s National Space Council, this one in the ornate East Room of the White House, telling the assembled U.S. space luminaries about his vision for cutting regulations and creating a U.S. Space Force “separate but equal” from the U.S. Air Force,
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“Record-Breaking” NASA Astronaut Peggy Whitson Retires
18 June 2018
The AP reported that Peggy Whitson, “NASA’s record-breaking astronaut,” retired Friday “less than a year after returning from her last and longest spaceflight.” Whitson has spent more time in space “than any other American: 665 days over three space station missions.” Whitson completed 10 spacewalks during her tenure, the most of any American; was the “first woman