In This Section
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NASA Preparing For Test Of Orion Crew Capsule Next Week
28 June 2019
28 June 2019 SPACE reports that on July 2, NASA “plans to prove out the Orion capsule’s launch-abort system, which is designed to get astronauts away from their rocket in the event of an emergency during launch.” The “critical component of NASA’s next crew-carrying spacecraft” will “liftoff…from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida during
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Students Can Go For Launch! in AIAA’s Apollo Series This Summer
27 June 2019
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] June 27, 2019 – Reston, Va. – This summer, students in grades 8–12 nationwide can meet astronauts and design an experiment that could be launched to the International Space Station next year through a partnership with the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and Higher Orbits to
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NASA Unseals Moon Rock Samples For First Time Since Apollo Missions
27 June 2019
27 June 2019 The AP reports that NASA is preparing to unseal “some of the pristine samples” of moon rocks collected from the Apollo missions. The samples, housed in a vault at a restricted lab in Johnson Space Center, will be made available to geologists to study “with 21st-century technology.” NASA Apollo sample curator Ryan Zeigler
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North Dakota DOT Receives FAA Waiver To Operate UAS Over People
27 June 2019
27 June 2019 Unmanned Aerial Online reports that the North Dakota DOT has “received a four-year waiver from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to routinely operate unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) over people.” Through its waiver, the state agency will “use a DJI Mavic 2 drone equipped with a ParaZero SafeAir parachute system.” The FAA “approved the
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NASA Holds Mars 2020 Rover Naming Contest
26 June 2019
26 June 2019 CNET News reports that “NASA is partnering with Ohio STEM training nonprofit Battelle Education and California education technology company Future Engineers to run” a contest to name the Mars 2020 rover. The Name the Rover contest seeks contributions from U.S. “kids in kindergarten through 12th grade,” and it “will start accepting submissions this
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Boeing 737 MAX Could Be Cleared For Flight Before Investigations Into Its Certification Are Complete
26 June 2019
26 June 2019 Bloomberg Government reports that the Boeing 737 MAX “could be flying again before the Federal Aviation Administration’s blue-ribbon panel or the Transportation Department’s inspector general complete their investigations of the certification that initially cleared the jet” to fly in the US. Both are two separate investigations from the assessment of the passenger jet’s
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Soyuz Capsule Returns ISS Crew To Earth After 204 Days In Space
25 June 2019
25 June 2019 SPACE reports that Roscosmos astronaut Oleg Kononenko, NASA astronaut Anne McClain, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut David Saint-Jacques “have returned to Earth after spending more than 200 days on board the International Space Station.” The three “landed aboard Russia’s Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft on Monday” after touching down “southeast of the town of [Zhezkazgan]
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DJI Denies Sending UAV Data To China
25 June 2019
25 June 2019 CNET News reports that Chinese UAV manufacturer DJI “told a Senate subcommittee Monday…that it doesn’t collect or share any drone data, including flight logs, photos or videos, without the consent of its users.” The company has faced criticism “in response to what it called ‘incorrect claims’ that were made during a hearing
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NASA Rover On Mars Detects Methane That Hints At Possibility Of Life
24 June 2019
24 June 2019 The New York Times reported that “in a measurement taken on Wednesday, NASA’s Curiosity rover discovered startlingly high amounts of methane in the Martian air.” A NASA spokesperson said, “To maintain scientific integrity, the project science team will continue to analyze the data before confirming results.” National Institute for Astrophysics scientist Marco Giuranna
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USAF Demonstrates New Counter-UAV Microwave Weapon
24 June 2019
24 June 2019 The Task & Purpose reported that last Thursday, the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory at Kirtland AFB in New Mexico demonstrated a new “high-powered microwave weapon” that can “instantaneously down swarms of enemy drones.” In the demonstration, the Tactical High Power Microwave Operational Responder, or THOR, system, “disabled the unmanned aerial vehicle in
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How Aeronautics Built the Foundation for Apollo’s Legacy
21 June 2019
by Michele McDonald, AIAA Communications Manager AIAA AVIATION FORUM, Dallas, June 21, 2019 — Never again in aerospace will one crucial group driven by their passion for aeronautics have such influence on the direction of the space mission, historians James Hansen and Bill Barry told the “Apollo’s Legacy and Impact on Modern Flight” plenary audience. Barry,
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SpaceX Test-Fires Falcon Heavy For First Night Launch
21 June 2019
21 June 2019 SPACE reports that SpaceX on June 19 test-fired its Falcon Heavy megarocket, as “after several hours of weather-related delays, the massive rocket roared to life, as smoke billowed from its engines during a preflight” static-fire test. The test ignition “is one of the last major milestones in launch preparations, ensuring that all systems
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NASA’s X-57 Electric Aircraft Demo Begins Ground Runs
21 June 2019
21 June 2019 Aviation Week reports that “NASA’s much-delayed X-57 Maxwell electric propulsion demonstrator program has taken a step forward” by beginning its “first ground runs…with electric motors and propellers installed.” The latest test of the X-57 involves “the Mod II configuration, in which 95-hp electric motors replace the P2006T’s two Rotax piston engines.” (Image Credit:
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Flying Car Startups Unveil Air Mobility Vehicles As Uber Plans Flying Taxi Service In 2023
20 June 2019
20 June 2019 USA Today reports that as Uber “forges ahead with plans for a flying taxi service in 2023, other startups are [also] unveiling futuristic air mobility vehicles.” Massachusetts-based Alaka’i Technologies “showed an electric human-carrying drone last month that it claims can carry five passengers,” and American-Israeli startup Next Future Transportation “hopes its new
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Boeing Relocates Space HQ To Florida Space Coast
20 June 2019
20 June 2019 Aviation Week reports that The Boeing Company “announced June 19 it will move its space and launch business unit’s headquarters from Virginia to Titusville, along the ‘revitalized’ Florida Space Coast.” Boeing Defense, Space and Security “is to relocate out of Arlington, Virginia, where it is currently headquartered next door to the Pentagon and
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Airbus Sees Transformation in Economics of Helicopter Flight
19 June 2019
By Hannah Godofsky, AIAA Communications AIAA AVIATION FORUM, Dallas, June 19, 2019 — Engineers often think about product strategy in terms of specifications or capabilities, but Chris Emerson, president of Airbus Helicopters, said during the “The Reality of a Vertical Dream” session here that he believes the biggest driver of change for their product will be economics.
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Eviation’s Electric Planes To Debut For Regional Airline Serving Nantucket, MA
19 June 2019
19 June 2019 Bloomberg reports that electric-plane company Eviation Aircraft “just signed up its first customer,” regional U.S. carrier Cape Air. Eviation’s “Alice” aircraft “is one of a host of electric models at the design stage, and its nine-passenger capacity and 650-mile range from a single charge could give it an edge in the commuter
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Rolls-Royce Purchases Siemens Unit, Shocks Electric Propulsion World
19 June 2019
19 June 2019 Reuters reports that “Siemens struck a deal to sell its in-house startup Siemens eAircraft to Rolls-Royce for an undisclosed sum, it said on Tuesday.” Siemens eAircraft specializes in electric and hybrid-electric propulsion systems, and it “has about 180 employees.” (Image: Siemens Magnus eFusion at Aero2016. Credit: Alec Wilson from Khon Kaen, Thailand |
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NASA’s Top Civil Servant Discusses Transformational Tech, Collaboration
18 June 2019
by Ben Iannotta, Aerospace America Editor-in-Chief AIAA AVIATION FORUM, Dallas, June 18, 2019 — NASA will make technical progress in the years ahead by focusing on modeling and simulation, autonomous control, and additive manufacturing while continuing to emphasize wide-ranging collaboration, said NASA Associate Administrator Stephen Jurczyk today during the “NASA Aeronautics” session. He said these technologies are among
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FAA Plans To Allow Testing Of Supersonic Commercial Jets
18 June 2019
18 June 2019 The Wall Street Journal reports that FAA Acting Administrator Dan Elwell said at a panel discussion at the Paris Air Show that the FAA is preparing to ease noise restrictions to allow for the testing of new supersonic commercial aircraft. Elwell said that the FAA plans to allow supersonic jets to make
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Lockheed Martin Begins Assembly Of NASA X-59 Low-Boom Demonstrator
18 June 2019
18 June 2019 Aviation Week reports that the “assembly of the X-59, the first purpose-designed piloted NASA aeronautics research X-plane since the X-31 nearly 30 years ago, is getting underway inside the cavernous Lockheed Martin Skunk Works facility in Palmdale, California.” In development of the experimental aircraft, “only the first few sections of aluminum wing
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Filmmaker Marvels Over Aviation at AIAA Forum
17 June 2019
by Michele McDonald, AIAA Communications Manager AIAA AVIATION FORUM, Dallas, June 17, 2019 — Filmmaker Brian J. Terwilliger says he always takes the window seat when he flies. He told the audience at his plenary session “Living in the Age of Airplanes” that what he sees out the window is better than any screen entertainment. Unless, perhaps, it’s
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Major Changes Occurring On Florida’s Space Coast
17 June 2019
17 June 2019 Aviation Week reports that following the closure of the Space Shuttle program in Florida, “the surrounding area took a huge hit to the employment base.” Although the shutdown’s “ill effects…were mostly felt in the Space Coast region, which encompasses Volusia, Brevard and Orange counties,” it “set in motion a strategy that focused on
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Signs Of Stress In International Aviation Industry Evident Ahead Of Paris Air Show
17 June 2019
17 June 2019 The AP reported that the global grounding of The Boeing Company’s 737 MAX fleet “and apprehension about the global economy hover over the aircraft industry as it prepares for [this] week’s Paris Air Show.” Furthermore, air cargo shipments have been falling this year, “and airlines have committed to buy so many planes that
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NASA MRO Observes Unusual Symbol On Mars
14 June 2019
14 June 2019 CBS News reports that the NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has observed “a series of strange chevron symbols on a Martian sand dune in the southeast Hellas Planitia region.” The MRO High-Resolution Imaging Science Experiment “camera team at the University of Arizona highlighted the discovery Wednesday, though the image was acquired by the
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GAO Expects KC-46 Refueling System Flaws Will Take Years To Fix, Cost Hundreds Of Millions
14 June 2019
14 June 2019 Air Force Times reports that “new designs will be required to fix some of the issues with the refueling boom and the remote vision system on the Air Force’s new KC-46 Pegasus tanker, and that could take years to fix, the Government Accountability Office said in a report released Wednesday.” The GAO
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McDonald’s, Uber Eats Partner To Test UAS Delivery
13 June 2019
13 June 2019 The AP reports on Uber Eats’ test implementations using UAS to make deliveries in San Diego, California, as part of a partnership with McDonald’s aimed at reducing delivery times and cost. The system allows restaurant workers to load the UAS with a meal payload, after which “it takes off, tracked and guided by a
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F-35 Program Working On More Major Fixes Than Previously Believed
13 June 2019
13 June 2019 Defense News reports that the F-35 has 13 major flaws that are currently impacting operations, with most having “escaped intense scrutiny by Congress and the media,” and a majority not even being “publicly disclosed, exposing a lack of transparency about the limitations of the Defense Department’s most expensive and high-profile weapons system.”
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SpaceX Satellite Launch Scheduled For Wednesday
12 June 2019
12 June 2019 CNET News reports that “SpaceX will launch a Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, containing the Canadian Space Agency’s Radarsat trio of Earth observation satellites on Wednesday.” The three Radarsat satellites “will gather data about the nation’s coasts and waterways to help ships navigate the Arctic, provide agriculture
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Sikorsky Receives $542M To Build 6 Marine One Helicopters
12 June 2019
12 June 2019 FlightGlobal reports that “Sikorsky was awarded a $542 million contract from the US Navy…to build six production VH-92A Presidential Helicopters, an aircraft which will be known by the call sign ‘Marine One’ when the president of the USA flies aboard.” The VH-92As “are part of low rate initial production lot 1,” and “the
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Turkey Ban To Eliminate 20% Of F-35 Sales In Europe
11 June 2019
11 June 2019 FlightGlobal reports that the removal of Turkey from the Joint Strike Fighter program would lead to a 20 percent reduction in F-35 sales in Europe, as “hopes the dispute over Ankara’s decision to buy the Russian Almaz-Antey S-400 Triumf anti-aircraft system would be solved are all but dashed” and “the country’s large
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New Zealand Military To Buy 5 Lockheed Martin Super Hercules Aircraft
11 June 2019
11 June 2019 The AP reports that the New Zealand Defence Force has announced that it will purchase five new Super Hercules aircraft to renew its aging Hercules fleet. New Zealand Minister of Defence Ron Mark “said Tuesday the estimated cost of the Lockheed Martin aircraft was more than 1 billion New Zealand dollars ($661 million), although
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First Falcon Heavy Night Launch Set For June 24 At Earliest
10 June 2019
10 June 2019 Spaceflight Now reported that “the first nighttime launch of SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket, and the first Falcon Heavy flight for the U.S. military, is set for no earlier than June 24 from pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, Air Force officials said Friday.” Small Launch and Targets Division Chief
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Final Delta 4-Medium Rocket Rolled Out To Cape Canaveral Launch Pad
10 June 2019
10 June 2019 Spaceflight Now reported that ground crews last week “finished the initial build-up of the last ‘single stick’ medium-lift variant of United Launch Alliance’s Delta 4 rocket on its launch pad at Cape Canaveral…in preparation for liftoff with a GPS navigation satellite July 25.” The rocket’s first and second stages “emerged from ULA’s
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NASA To Send Deep Space Atomic Clock Into Orbit This Month
7 June 2019
7 June 2019 SPACE reports that NASA’s Deep Space Atomic Clock “is scheduled to launch to Earth orbit on June 22 aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.” The clock “will help spacecraft navigate autonomously through the final frontier.” NASA said in a Deep Space Atomic Clock FAQ, “A Deep Space Atomic Clock on a spacecraft
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Jupiter And Its 4 Moons Will Be Visible To Unaided Eye In June
7 June 2019
7 June 2019 USA Today reports that Jupiter on Monday will “be visible with the naked eye as it rises in the east at sunset and climbs high through the sky all night, before setting in the west as the sun rises Tuesday.” During the planet’s opposition, viewers on Earth will “also be able to
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Amazon Suggests Prime Air UAV Deliveries Could Happen “Within Months”
6 June 2019
6 June 2019 ABC News reports Amazon “said it’s taking deliveries to the next level – quite literally – within a few months by using drones.” The company “made the announcement Wednesday at its MARS Conference in Las Vegas, with the company’s CEO of Amazon Worldwide Consumer, Jeff Wilke sharing the news and design specs for
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Historic Aircraft, Paratroopers Take Flight Again To Commemorate 75th Anniversary Of D-Day
6 June 2019
6 June 2019 Fox News reports that as part of events to honor the military service of airborne soldiers who took part in the June 6, 1944, D-Day invasion, a fleet of C-47 transport planes on Wednesday dropped approximately 200 parachutists over Normandy, France. Among the jumpers were World War II paratrooper veterans, and others
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Dragon Capsule Returns To Port With 2.1 Tons Of Cargo
5 June 2019
5 June 2019 Spaceflight Now reported that SpaceX’s Dragon cargo craft on Monday “returned to Earth with more than 4,200 pounds (1,900 kilograms) of equipment.” Following the capsule’s touchdown in the Pacific Ocean, “SpaceX recovery teams were on station…to hoist the capsule aboard a boat for the trip back to the Port of Los Angeles,
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Rolls-Royce Seeking Repair Partners For Next-Gen Engines
5 June 2019
5 June 2019 Aviation Week reports that “Rolls-Royce is expanding MRO capacity and repair capabilities for Trent 1000 and XWB engines.” The engine manufacturer is “trying to find both engine maintenance capacity and repair capability, in advance of models such as the Trent 1000 and XWB entering their first shop refurbishment visits in a couple years,
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USAF, FAA Partner To Promote Aviation Nationwide
4 June 2019
4 June 2019 ExecutiveGov reports that the FAA and the U.S. Air Force have begun “a new initiative to increase partnerships with industry to address the national aircrew shortage.” Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson said, “This collaborative effort will enable the Air Force and the FAA to work with industry partners to share best practices
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Spacecraft That Sail On Sunshine Under Development
4 June 2019
4 June 2019 NBC News reports that the June 22 launch of LightSail 2 “could be a prelude to a new era of spaceflight in which spacecraft forgo the rocket motors they’ve relied on for decades and simply sail on sunshine.” The Planetary Society CEO Bill Nye said, “This will be the first time navigating
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AIAA Statement on Senate Confirmation of FAA Administrator
3 June 2019
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Michele McDonald 703.264.7542 [email protected] AIAA President Congratulates Stephen Dickson July 24, 2019 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) congratulates former Delta Air Lines executive Stephen Dickson on being confirmed as the FAA’s 18th administrator. He will serve a five-year term. AIAA President John Langford made the
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NASA to Launch Rockets from Northern Territory, Australia
3 June 2019
3 June 2019 The Daily Mail reported that NASA “has signed a world-first deal” with Arnhem Space Centre in the Northern Territory, Australia “to launch rockets in 2020.” The private spaceport “will become the first privately-owned site outside the US to launch NASA rockets.” Equatorial Launch Australia CEO Carley Scott “said the exciting deal was the
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Students Fly UAVs In Canadian Competition
3 June 2019
3 June 2019 The Montreal Gazette reported that as demonstrated by this year’s Student Unmanned Aerial System Competition, “the market for the use of unmanned aerial vehicles…is skyrocketing.” The annual student competition “draws industry executives, sponsors and government officials looking for potential hires and to see what the brightest young minds are doing to advance technologies
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NASA’s James Webb Telescope Completes Final Vacuum Test
31 May 2019
31 May 2019 Forbes reports that “NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope is one step closer to its 2021 launch, after clearing its final thermal vacuum test.” Astronomers are now preparing for “another round of testing and evaluation ahead of the proposed launch in 2021.”(Image Credit: NASA/Desiree Stover | Aerospace America) Full Story (Forbes)
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DJI Touts UAV Safety, Validation Of Security Measures
31 May 2019
31 May 2019 Aviation Week reports that UAV manufacturer DJI “made a bold commitment to equip its new models with surveillance receivers as a safety enhancement,” given that “being the world market leader positions a company to be a trendsetter but also attracts outsized attention from the public and media.” (Image: DJI Phantom 4. Credit: Associated
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Cosmonauts Complete Spacewalk, Honor Spacewalk Pioneer
30 May 2019
30 May 2019 CBS News reports that Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kononenko and Alexey Ovchinin “stepped outside the International Space Station Wednesday, sent birthday greetings to former cosmonaut Alexey Leonov, the first man to walk in space, and then pressed ahead with a full slate of maintenance work.” The two “opened the hatch of the Pirs
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US, Japan To Cooperate On Return To The Moon
30 May 2019
30 May 2019 SPACE reports that “the governments of the United States and Japan have agreed to further cooperation in space which could include flying Japanese astronauts to the moon.” In remarks at a bilateral press conference during his May 27 meeting with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in Tokyo, President Donald Trump “mentioned cooperation in
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Funding, Support For Nuclear Thermal Space Propulsion Making Progress
29 May 2019
29 May 2019 SPACE reports that “nuclear thermal propulsion technology is making progress for potential use on future NASA deep space missions, although how it fits into the agency’s exploration architectures remains uncertain.” Funding for the technology in the May 23 House Appropriations Committee’s CJS bill “includes $125 million for nuclear thermal propulsion development within