In This Section
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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
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CFM’s Leap Deliveries Overtake CFM56 For First Time
18 June 2018
Aviation Week reported that deliveries of CFM International’s Leap-1 engines “are about to overtake those of the CFM56 for the first time.” The development is a “watershed moment” for the GE Aviation-Safran Aircraft Engines joint venture, and “comes as combined deliveries of the two engine families remain on course to reach between 2,000 and 2,250 for
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AIAA Member Spotlight – June 2018
15 June 2018
AIAA Profiles AIAA Fellow Dr. John Valasek By Michele McDonald, AIAA Communications Manager John Valasek was destined to become an aerospace engineer all thanks to the simple fact that his mother attended a Blue Angels airshow in Los Alamitos, California, when she was seven months pregnant with him in 1961. And Valasek is not one to
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Airbus Debuts New A320 Production Line With Increased Automation
15 June 2018
Reuters reports that Airbus “inaugurated a new production line” for its A320 jet with “robots Luise and Renate joining human workers as it turns to new automation to help it deal with an eight-year order backlog.” Airbus hopes that digital technology “will enable higher production and trigger a significant shift in research and development spending toward
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Lawmakers Criticize NASA Cost, Schedule Overruns
15 June 2018
The Hill reports that lawmakers at a congressional hearing Thursday “scolded NASA officials over a recent report that found the space agency’s major projects are running over-budget and over-schedule.” A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that NASA’s four “highest-profile programs” – the Space Launch System (SLS), Orion Spacecraft, Commercial Crew Program, and James Webb Space
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EU Votes to Exclude Britain from Galileo Satellite Program
14 June 2018
The Guardian (UK) reports that a majority of European Union (EU) member states have “turned against” the United Kingdom and voted in favor of “pushing forward on the next round of contracts for the £8bn” Galileo satellite program, “despite requests for a delay to allow negotiations over British involvement to progress.” British companies are barred from
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Pratt & Whitney Outlines Changes To F-35 Engine Upgrade Path
14 June 2018
Aviation International News reports that Pratt & Whitney (P&W) has changed its “proposed upgrade path for the F135 engine powering the F-35 Lightning II stealth fighter,” and now offers two stages of “improvements over a four-year period, compared with the three-stage, 10-year plan ending with a completely new engine that it revealed a year ago.” The
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NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Captures Meteoroid Impact
13 June 2018
CNET News reports that NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) “captured a view of Mars showing an impact crater and its unusual aftermath.” The crater itself is shown as a “fuzzy, round area with a slash of dark material leading away from it” due to an avalanche triggered by the impact. The MRO took the image in
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Unmanned NASA Aircraft Flies Solo For First Time
13 June 2018
The AP reports that NASA flew a “large, remotely piloted aircraft equipped with detect-and-avoid technologies through the national airspace system for the first time without a safety chase plane following it.” According to NASA, Tuesday’s flight over California moves the US closer to allowing unmanned aircraft operation within the US national airspace. NASA’s Ikhana, a “non-military version
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Orbital ATK Plans To Expand Satellite Service Offerings
12 June 2018
Space News reports that Orbital ATK’s SpaceLogistics subsidiary plans to offer customers a “wide range of products and services, beginning with its Mission Extension Vehicle (MEV) and progressing to in-orbit spacecraft assembly, repair and cis-lunar transportation.” Orbital ATK Vice President Jim Armor called the MEV a “baby step” toward satellite servicing, and according to SpaceLogistics Vice
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National Academies Panel Finds FAA Too Cautious Regarding UAVs
12 June 2018
The AP reports that scientists advising the federal government believe that “safety regulators should do more to speed the integration of commercial drones into the nation’s airspace.” The National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine in a report Monday accused the FAA of making “overly conservative risk assessments” that focus on the potential downsides “instead of a
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2018 AIAA AVIATION Forum Explores “Partnering for Transformation”
12 June 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: John Blacksten 703.264.7532 [email protected] Industry Leaders Discuss Latest Trends in Aviation June 12, 2018 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) will hold its 2018 Aviation and Aeronautics Forum and Exposition (AIAA AVIATION Forum), June 25-29, at the Hyatt Regency in Atlanta, Ga. This year’s theme is “Expanding the
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Media Advisory: AIAA Executive Director to Offer Congressional Testimony about NASA’s Cost and Schedule Overruns
12 June 2018
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: John Blacksten 703.264.7532 [email protected] MEDIA ADVISORY Dumbacher Calls on Congress to Provide Stable, Long-Term Funding and Help Address Workforce Needs June 12, 2018 – Reston, Va. – American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Executive Director Dan Dumbacher will testify before the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Space on Thursday, June
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SpaceX Plans “Major Expansion” Of KSC
11 June 2018
Florida Today reported that according to a draft environmental review recently published by Kennedy Space Center (KSC), “SpaceX will undertake a major expansion of its facilities at the space center sometime in the not-too-distant future.” The new proposed Launch and Landing Control Center at Kennedy Space Center would include a “world-class, architecturally distinctive” tower up to
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FAA Certification For Cessna Longitude A “Moving Target”
11 June 2018
The Wichita Eagle reported that new FAA requirements are stretching the certification date for Textron Aviation’s new Cessna Citation Longitude business jet “farther than the company planned.” Certification has been a “moving target” for the jet, which Textron originally hoped to enter into service in 2017. According to Textron Aviation Senior Vice President of Engineering Brad Thress,
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Aerojet Rocketdyne Completes First Engine For Boeing “Phantom Express” Spaceplane
8 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that the FAA has instituted the “latest in a series of no-drone zones over federal facilities” on June 7 as news “surfaced separately that the Defense Department has ordered its units to stop buying commercial unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) until the Pentagon develops a cybersecurity strategy.” The FAA named 19 US prisons overseen
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FAA Expands UAV No-Fly Zones Over Federal Facilities
8 June 2018
Aviation Week reports that the FAA has instituted the “latest in a series of no-drone zones over federal facilities” on June 7 as news “surfaced separately that the Defense Department has ordered its units to stop buying commercial unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) until the Pentagon develops a cybersecurity strategy.” The FAA named 19 US prisons overseen
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Bridenstine: NASA To Consider “A Range Of Options” For ISS
7 June 2018
The New York Times reports that NASA is working on plans to “commercialize the International Space Station, which currently costs up to $4 billion a year to maintain.” According to NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine, the agency will consider “a range of options” to allow for private operation of the station. He added that under some options, “the
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White House Aide: Drones Are The Future Of US Aviation
7 June 2018
Writing for CNN , Deputy Assistant to the President on Technology Policy Michael Kratsios argues that UAVs are the future of US aviation. Kratsios forecasts that UAVs will “create countless American jobs within and around the aviation industry, transform the delivery of household goods, improve the safety of dangerous occupations and expand access to life-saving medical supplies.”
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NASA To Announce Major Mars Curiosity Discovery Thursday
6 June 2018
USA Today reports in a video that NASA plans to make a major announcement Thursday about a new science discovery by the agency’s Mars Curiosity rover. More Info (USA Today)
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Researchers Developing UAV Technology Inspired By Bee Brains
6 June 2018
USA Today reports in a video that NASA plans to make a major announcement Thursday about a new science discovery by the agency’s Mars Curiosity rover. More Info (USA Today)
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CALC in Talks with Boeing, Airbus on 200-Aircraft Order to “Meet Surging Demand from Asian Carriers”
5 June 2018
Bloomberg News reports that China Aircraft Leasing Group Holdings (CALC) is in talks with Airbus and The Boeing Company to “order as many as 200 planes as the state-backed lessor seeks to meet surging demand from Asian carriers.” The lessor is looking at both narrow-body and wide-body jets, according to CEO Mike Poon, and is considering
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Video Of Monday’s SpaceX Launch Released
5 June 2018
USA Today hosts video of Monday’s early morning launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying an SES communications satellite. More Info (USA Today)
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Ukraine Signs $643 Million Contract With Airbus Helicopters
4 June 2018
FlightGlobal reported that Airbus Helicopters won a $643 million contract to supply 55 helicopters “to Ukraine’s interior ministry, including a number of second-hand units.” The order will include a mix of “H125 light-singles, H145 medium-twins and H225 heavy-twins,” with the first four aircraft to be delivered this year. According to Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, at least
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Video Released Of Successful Virgin Galactic Test Flight
31 May 2018
SPACE hosts a two-and-a-half-minute video of the successful test flight of Virgin Galactic’s VSS Unity space plane. The video “chronicles” the test flight “over California’s Mojave Desert from takeoff to landing.” The video features “gorgeous shots of Unity rocketing upward atop a tail of bright-orange flame,” as well as footage “inside the cockpit.” More Info (SPACE)
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SpaceX May Delay Launch Until Friday Morning
30 May 2018
The Orlando (FL) Sentinel reports that this week’s SpaceX Falcon 9 launch attempt “could happen just after midnight in the wee hours of Friday morning, from 12:29 a.m. to 2:57 a.m.” SpaceX has not officially announced its launch window, but the preliminary times were drawn from the US Air Force’s 45th Weather Squadron. Weather conditions “could be
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Two US F-15 Fighters Narrowly Avoid Collision With British Police UAV
30 May 2018
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that a British police UAV operator had to steer his unmanned aircraft “away from the path of an F-15 fighter jet travelling at nearly 520mph.” The Devon and Cornwall officer “was convinced there would be a collision” when the fighter “came into view and then banked right above Throwleigh, Devon” on January
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Lockheed: F-35 One Of Pentagon’s “Most Cyber Tested Weapons Systems”
29 May 2018
The Press Association (UK) reports that according to Lockheed Martin F-35 International Business Development Director Steve Over, the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter is likely one of the “most cyber tested weapons systems that exists in US Department of Defence inventory.” According to Over, the aircraft has “passed every cyber test that has been applied against
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US Army Seeks Industry Help For Manned-Unmanned Teaming
28 May 2018
Aviation Today reported that as part of a “new spirit of outreach to industry,” the US Army “wants to know what the private sector can do to better team drones with manned aircraft.” Manned-unmanned teaming (MUM-T) has been a recent “focus” for the Army, which is working to determine what “products, research, operational concepts and mission
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Jet Engine Demand Fuels Rise In Cobalt Prices
25 May 2018
Reuters reports that a “shrinking supply” of cobalt as well as “robust demand from traditional sectors such as jet engine makers are helping fuel a price rally that shows no signs of fading.” Cobalt is used in the manufacture of lithium-ion batteries as well as “superalloys, valued for their resistance to high temperatures and corrosion” in
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Smallsats Drive “Disruption” In Propulsion Technology
25 May 2018
Space News reports that according to a panel at the Space Tech Expo, small satellites have spurred technological advances that have “opened up a wide range of propulsion options for satellites.” Executives for several propulsion startups believe that the “demands for propulsion that can meet mass, volume and power constraints of small satellites were helping drive
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Boeing F/A-18E/F Demonstrates “Sensor Fusion” Capability
24 May 2018
FlightGlobal reports that as The Boeing Company launches production of the new Block III variant, F/A-18E/F fighters have demonstrated a “sensor fusion capability that combines the data from multiple sensors on both aircraft in near real-time.” While sensor fusion capability is “most often associated” with the F-35, the “F/A-18E/F fleet has been steadily catching up to
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Reusable Launchers See “Growing Acceptance” In Market
24 May 2018
Space News reports that both SpaceX and its competitors are “seeing a growing acceptance of reusable vehicles in the overall market.” SpaceX Senior Director for Government Business Development Josh Brost, speaking at the Space Tech Expo conference, stated that SpaceX is working with “other government entities” about using previously flown boosters, which likely includes the US
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US Air Force To Study Upgraded Falcon 9, Delay GPS III Launch
23 May 2018
Bloomberg News reports that the US Air Force has delayed the launch of its “first Global Positioning System III satellite from this month to October at the earliest as it reviews” the Falcon 9 Block 5 rocket. In a statement, Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center explained that the planned launch “has slipped due to
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FAA Working On New Supersonic Aircraft Noise Certification
23 May 2018
Bloomberg News reports that the FAA is crafting new regulations “to accommodate noise certification of new supersonic aircraft,” according to an FAA post on the White House website. The only US noise standards in effect apply to the Concorde. The FAA also is developing a “second new rule that will allow easier approvals for supersonic-flight testing,
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SpaceX Falcon 9 Rocket Successfully Deploys Iridium, NASA Satellites
23 May 2018
Aerospace America reports that a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California deployed a pair of “NASA climate-change satellites into polar orbit on its way to deploying the next tranche of Iridium NEXT satellites” for the company’s “airline tracking service through a joint venture among Aireon, Nav Canada and other navigation
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NASA Requests Proposals For Europa Lander Instruments
22 May 2018
SPACE reports that NASA “has asked scientists to submit their ideas for instruments” on the agency’s Europa Lander. According to a tweet by NASA Science Mission Directorate Associate Administrator Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA is accepting submissions through August 24. In contrast to the agency’s Europa Clipper mission, the Europa lander “is on less solid ground; it’s a
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Boeing-Backed Startup To Deliver First Hybrid-Electric Plane To JetSuite In 2022
22 May 2018
Bloomberg News reports that Boeing-backed startup Zunum Aero will deliver its first hybrid-electric plane in 2022 to JetSuite, a small charter airline. JetBlue Airways has also invested in Zunum and JetSuite. The new aircraft will be powered by “twin propulsors attached to the rear of its frame” using electric motors, while a conventional fuel-powered motor will
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US Air Force Planning For Future F-35 “Fleet Management Office”
22 May 2018
Aviation Today reports that the US Air Force is exploring “how it will oversee its share of the F-35 Lightning II Joint Strike Fighter program” in light of the US military’s recently announced decision to shift more control of the fighter to the individual military branches. According to Air Force Materiel Command Commander Gen. Ellen Pawlikowski,