Industry News
In This Section
News about the aerospace industry curated by AIAA staff
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ISS Dodges Chinese Space Debris
11 November 2021
The New York Times reports that the International Space Station (ISS) on Wednesday “was forced to maneuver itself to avoid a piece of debris spawned by a Chinese antisatellite weapon test in 2007.” NASA and Roscosmos worked together to fire the ISS’ thrusters, raising its altitude by nearly a mile. Full Story (New York Times)
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Lockheed Martin’s SR-72 Revolutionary
10 November 2021
The National Interest reports on the continued development of Lockheed Martin’s SR-72 uncrewed hypersonic aircraft. Referring to a digital rendering that had been presented at 2018 AIAA SciTech Forum, Lockheed Martin Vice President Jack O’Banion said, “Without the digital transformation[,] the aircraft you see there could not have been made. In fact, five years ago, it could
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NSTC Interagency Panel to Update National Orbital Debris R&D Plan
10 November 2021
Space News reports that the US government’s orbital debris R&D plan is to be updated by “an interagency group within the National Science and Technology Council that deals with national security and space issues.” However, former SpaceX Vice President of Government Affairs Patricia Cooper said at 2021 ASCEND that “there are internal disagreements in the US government
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Parker Solar Probe Bombarded by Space Dust, Causing Plasma Explosions
9 November 2021
CNET News reports that NASA’s Parker Solar Probe is being bombarded by space dust “at such speed that its body is constantly experiencing plasma explosions.” A team of scientists “at the University of Colorado, Boulder’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory studied the severity of these impacts,”
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GE to Split into Three Companies
9 November 2021
Bloomberg reports that General Electric is to split up into three separate companies, each “focused on health care, power and aviation.” The healthcare division “will be spun off in early 2023.” GE’s “renewable energy, power equipment and digital businesses” will be combined into a separate unit “that will then be spun off in 2024.” The remaining
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X-61 Gremlin Recovered by C-130 Mid-Flight for the First Time
8 November 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reported that an X-61 Gremlin Air Vehicle, “an unmanned reconnaissance vehicle developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), has been recovered while in mid-flight for the first time, DARPA announced Friday.” In the demonstration was held last month, “two of the drones performed autonomous formation flying positions before one GAV
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SpaceX Delays Next Crew Flight Due To Weather
5 November 2021
The AP reports NASA officials announced Monday that a “medical issue has sidelined one of four astronauts assigned to SpaceX’s upcoming flight to the International Space Station and delayed the launch.” The launch has been delayed until Saturday night at the earliest. The unnamed astronaut is affected by a “minor medical issue” unrelated to COVID-19 Full Story
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Second Loyal Wingman UAV Performs Flight Tests
5 November 2021
Aviation Week reports that a second Boeing Airpower Teaming System (ATS), “better known as the Loyal Wingman, has commenced flight tests at Australia’s Woomera Range Complex, including the raising and lower of the undercarriage.” Both UAVs “are performing separate flight tests.” Full Story (Aviation Week)
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Aerospace Industry Rebound Could be Harmed by Fragile Supply Chain
4 November 2021
FlightGlobal reports that Safran Chief Executive Olivier Andries warned last week that the industry’s supply chain has been weakened by the COVID-19 pandemic. Andries noted “concerns about human resources” and “tensions in raw material availability” as notable factors. The Boeing Company Chief Executive David Calhoun said, “By the second half of next year, our industry
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Water Detected in Galaxy 12.8B Light Years from Earth
4 November 2021
USA Today reports that scientists “have discovered evidence of water in a galaxy roughly 12.8 billion light-years from Earth, making it one of the most distant discoveries of water in the universe.” The galaxy, SPT-311-58, was discovered in 2017 by researchers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array in Chile. The scientists from the University of Illinois
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Embraer CEO Says New Customers Change Business Jet Market Dynamics
3 November 2021
Aviation International News reports that Embraer Executive Jets CEO and President Michael Amalfitano described at Corporate Jet Investor Miami 2021 how the increase in first-time business aviation users is changing the aircraft industry’s dynamics. Amalfitano said, “When you look at that growth at the bottom, the access is growing. You have to start thinking about what
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NASA, Space Force See Benefits in Using Commercial Space Services
3 November 2021
Space News reports that NASA Chief Economist Alexander MacDonald said private competition for NASA contracts is “one of the most exciting things that we’re seeing.” MacDonald said the announcement of privately designed commercial space stations to succeed the International Space Station are “very exciting from a market dynamics perspective.” Full Story (Space News)
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SpaceX Launch Delayed Due to Astronaut’s Medical Issue
2 November 2021
The AP reports NASA officials announced Monday that a “medical issue has sidelined one of four astronauts assigned to SpaceX’s upcoming flight to the International Space Station and delayed the launch.” The launch has been delayed until Saturday night at the earliest. The unnamed astronaut is affected by a “minor medical issue” unrelated to COVID-19 Full Story
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First KC-46A Tanker Delivered to Japan Air Self-Defense Force
2 November 2021
Air Force Times reports that The Boeing Company “has delivered the first of four KC-46A tankers to the Japan Air Self-Defense Force, marking the program’s first delivery to a customer outside the United States.” The KC-46A “made the trans-Pacific flight after departing Boeing’s facilities in Seattle, Washington, on Thursday afternoon local time, arriving at Miho Air
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Third US Space Force Launch to be Added to Falcon Heavy 2022 Manifest
1 November 2021
Space News reports that the classified geostationary Earth orbit mission USSF-67 is “on track for mid-to-late 2022 launch.” USSF-67, awarded to SpaceX last year, will “fly on a Falcon Heavy rocket with an expendable center core.” Additionally, US Space Force missions USSF-44 and USSF-52 have had their launches delayed to 2022. Full Story (SpaceNews)
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Lockheed Martin Adds More than 300 New Jobs for F-16 Program
1 November 2021
ExecutiveGov reported that Lockheed Martin “has announced the addition of over 300 new jobs in F-16 production and sustainment areas at the company’s location in Greenville, South Carolina by the end of next year.” Lockheed Martin “said Monday the company is seeking to fill positions including airframe and power plant mechanics, avionics technicians, engineers, supervisors,
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NASA Debates Whether to Fix Lucy’s Jammed Solar Panel
29 October 2021
The AP reports that NASA “is debating whether to try to fix a jammed solar panel on its newly launched Lucy spacecraft, en route to explore an unprecedented number of asteroids.” The problem “has not affected Lucy’s outbound flight” thus far. Full Story (Associated Press)
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Volocopter Exhibits eVTOL at Fiumicino
29 October 2021
Aviation Today reports that Volocopter “is exhibiting a scaled version of its VoloCity eVTOL at Fiumicino Airport this week as part of a new partnership with Atlantia and Aeroporti di Roma that seeks to bring electric air taxi operations to Italy in the next 2-3 years.” Full Story (Aviation Today)
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First Hydrogen-Powered Commercial Flights Planned for 2024
28 October 2021
The Hill reports that ZeroAvia announced Wednesday “plans to carry out the first commercial hydrogen-electric flights between Rotterdam and London in 2024.” ZeroAvia is “partnering with airport company Royal Schiphol Group, Rotterdam The Hague Innovation Airport Foundation and Rotterdam the Hague Airport to make the commercial flights possible.” Full Story (The Hill)
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Hubble Space Telescope Experiences Glitch for Second Time This Year
28 October 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reports NASA announced Monday that the Hubble Space Telescope went into “safe mode” after experiencing “‘synchronization issues with internal spacecraft communications.” NASA tweeted, “Science observations have been temporarily suspended while the team investigates the issue…The instruments remain in good health.” Full Story (Daily Mail)
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F-15EX Eagle II Completes First Operational Test Mission
27 October 2021
ExecutiveGov reports that the US Air Force “recently completed the first-ever operational test mission of its new Boeing F-15EX Eagle II fighter aircraft at Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada.” The F-15EX “features a new digital fly-by-wire control technology signaling a departure from its predecessor’s standard hydro-mechanical system” and the Eagle Passive Active Warning Survivability
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ULA Targets November 22 for STP-3 Launch
27 October 2021
Space News reports that United Launch Alliance “is targeting a Nov. 22 liftoff for the U.S. Space Force STP-3 mission aboard an Atlas 5 rocket.” The Atlas 5 551 “will fly with five solid rocket boosters and launch two satellites directly to geosynchronous orbit.” The two satellites are the STPSat-6 carrying “NASA’s Laser Communications Relay Demonstration
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SpaceX Cleared to Fly Cosmonauts by Roscosmos
26 October 2021
Aviation Week reports that Roscosmos Director General Dimitry Rogozin said Monday that SpaceX has been cleared to fly cosmonauts on Crew Dragon after SpaceX conducted four crewed spaceflights with the Crew Dragon spacecraft. Full Story (Aviation International News)
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Helipass Encourages Open Market for eVTOL Growth
26 October 2021
Aviation International News reports that Helipass “is in talks with its network of around 120 helicopter operators to encourage them to transition to electric aircraft.” Helipass “seeks to provide a user-friendly booking platform for customers and also software that operators can use to handle payments, fleet planning, and passenger records.” Full Story (Aviation International News)
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NASA Advocates for Nuclear-Powered Spacecraft
25 October 2021
SPACE reported NASA and aerospace experts “discussed how the U.S. stacks up against other nations when it comes to developing new nuclear propulsion technology” at a House of Representatives hearing last week. NASA Budget and Finance Senior Advisor Bhavya Lal said, “Strategic competitors including China are aggressively investing in a wide range of space technologies,
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Heathrow to Utilize Flying Taxis
25 October 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reported that passengers arriving at Heathrow could take air taxis from the airport “to cities in the south of England for the price of an Uber in just four years’ time.” An air taxi could take passengers from Heathrow to London’s Canary Wharf “in just 13 minutes for around £50 per passenger. A
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NASA Begins Process to Procure More Commercial Crew Missions
22 October 2021
Space News reports that NASA issued a request for information Wednesday “seeking information from industry on their ability to transport astronauts” to and from the International Space Station. NASA Commercial Crew Program Manager Steve Stich “said NASA was starting to consider its plans for acquiring additional commercial crew flights, given that both SpaceX was nearing
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American, Southwest Report Profits as Industry Recovers
22 October 2021
FlightGlobal reports that airlines are increasing the amount of flights and destinations it is offering as the industry begins to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting slowdown in travel. Analysts “still suspect the industry will not fully recover for several years – possibly not until 2023 – and a second wave of Covid-19 infections
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NASA, SpaceX Plan Halloween Launch of Crew-3 Flight to Space Station
21 October 2021
SPACE reports that the next NASA space station launch, which is set for Halloween, “will put four more astronauts into space on a SpaceX rocket. The Crew-3 launch is scheduled for Sunday, Oct. 31 at 2:21 a.m. EDT (0721 GMT), using a Falcon 9 rocket. The launch will take place at Launch Complex 39A at
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US Navy Utilizes UAVs for In-Flight Refueling
21 October 2021
CBS News reports on the US Navy’s new MQ-25 Stingray UAV and its use to refuel fighter jets in mid-flight, keeping carriers out of the range of enemy anti-ship weapons. Full Story (CBS News)
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NASA Releases Audio from Perseverance Rover
20 October 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that NASA has released audio from the Perseverance rover. Perseverance has been recording the “eerie sounds of Mars” since the probe’s arrival in February, making it the first craft to record sound on Mars. Full Story (Daily Mail)
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Rolls-Royce Successfully Test Flies Trent 1000 on 100% SAF
20 October 2021
Aviation International News reports that Rolls-Royce announced Tuesday it “has carried out a successful test flight of its 747 flying testbed aircraft using 100 percent Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) in a Trent 1000 turbofan.” The aircraft “flew from Tucson International Airport in Arizona, passing over New Mexico and Texas, carrying a Trent 1000 engine running
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NASA Moves Orion to Vehicle Assembly Building
19 October 2021
Spaceflight Now reports that NASA teams at the Kennedy Space Center “moved the Orion spacecraft for the Artemis 1 moon mission into the Vehicle Assembly Building Tuesday for stacking on top of the Space Launch System.” The Orion spacecraft was rolled “into the iconic assembly building around 5 a.m. EDT (0900 GMT) Tuesday.” Full Story (Spaceflight
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Volocopter Conducts First Public Demonstration of VoloDrone
19 October 2021
Aviation Week reports that Volocopter and DB Schenker “conducted the first public demonstration of the VoloDrone heavy-lift unmanned cargo aircraft at the ITS World Congress in Hamburg on Oct. 12, and followed up by announcing plans for a mobile takeoff and landing platform for the cargo aircraft.” Full Story (Aviation Week)
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Starliner Valve Investigation Focuses on Moisture Interaction with Propellant
18 October 2021
Space News reported that The Boeing Company continues to investigate what caused 13 of the CST-100 Starliner’s valves to stick in the closed position before its scrubbed test flight in early August. The leading cause for the valve failure “is that nitrogen tetroxide (NTO) propellant, leaking through the valve, reacted with moisture and created nitric
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KC-46 Approved for TRANSCOM Missions
18 October 2021
Air Force Times reported that Air Mobility Command announced Friday that the KC-46 Pegasus tanker “is now able to refuel the Air Force’s fourth-generation fighter jets during missions for U.S. Transportation Command, expanding the service’s air refueling capacity and the capability of its newest tanker.” Full Story (Air Force Times)
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Joby’s eVTOL Seeks Solution to Air Travel
15 October 2021
CNN reports that Joby detailed how its new eVTOL aircraft “could be the solution for a cheaper, quieter and greener means of commercial flying.” Joby’s partnership with Uber “will allow the company to offer its eVTOL service directly in the Uber app, but Joby also plans to have a direct-to-consumer app of its own.” Joby
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NASA’s Lucy to Visit Eight Asteroids
15 October 2021
The AP reports that NASA “is set to launch a series of spacecraft to visit and even bash some of the solar system’s most enticing space rocks.” The Lucy probe is to launch this weekend “on a 12-year cruise to swarms of asteroids out near Jupiter – unexplored time capsules from the dawn of the solar system.”
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Advanced SLS Could Carry Out Mars Flyby, Interstellar Probe Missions
14 October 2021
Aviation Week reports that advanced models of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS), “could be used in the long term to carry out a human Mars flyby and dispatch an interstellar probe to study the realm beyond the Solar System.” Full Story (Aviation Week)
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Northrop Grumman to Hire 500 More Engineers in Huntsville
14 October 2021
The AP reports that Northrop Grumman “plans to hire 500 more engineers in the Huntsville area to support America’s new Air Force-led defense against foreign nuclear missile attack.” Full Story (Accociated Press)
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Australian PM Scott Morrison Announces Moon Mission
13 October 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has signed a deal with NASA to send an Australian-made rover to the moon after 2026. Australian businesses and research organizations “will bid for up to $50million of taxpayer cash to build the rover, with applications submitted early next year.” Full Story (Daily Mail)
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US Army Unveils UH-60V Black Hawk Helicopter
13 October 2021
Aviation International News reports that in early October, the US Army “formally lifted the veil on the Lockheed Martin/Sikorsky UH-60V Black Hawk helicopter.” The ceremony was held at Muir Army Airfield in Pennsylvania, where the state’s National Guard operates the Eastern Army National Guard Aviation Training Site (EAATS). Pennsylvania Adjutant General Maj. Gen. Mark Schindler
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Boeing Announces Return of MAX BBJ
12 October 2021
Aviation Week reports that The Boeing Company “has announced the service debut of the first 737 MAX-based BBJ 737-8 as well as the first new order for the corporate variant since the return of the MAX to commercial service in 2020.” Full Story (Aviation Week)
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William Shatner to Head to Space Aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard
12 October 2021
USA Today reports that William Shatner, 90, will be the oldest man to fly in space when his flight on a Blue Origin New Shepard rocket lifts off later this week. The flight was scheduled for Tuesday, but was “delayed due to forecasted high winds at its launch site” in West Texas. Full Story (USA Today)
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New SpaceX Crew Dragon Capsule Named “Endurance,” Crew-3 Excited to Head to ISS
8 October 2021
SPACE reports that NASA astronaut Raja Chari announced Thursday that the SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule which will take the Crew-3 mission crew to the ISS will be named “Endurance.” Endurance “will be the third Crew Dragon vehicle to carry people to orbit.” Full Story (SPACE)
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F135 Engine Shortage Impacts F-35 Fleet
8 October 2021
Aviation Week reports that a “shortage of Pratt & Whitney F135 engines that is already keeping more than four dozen Lockheed Martin F-35s grounded will continue to worsen.” Full Story (Aviation Week)
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NASA’s LRO Takes Picture of Jupiter and Two Moons
7 October 2021
The Daily Mail (UK) reports that NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter “has snapped an eerie black and white photo of Jupiter and two of its moons.” The picture of Jupiter, Io, and Europa was taken from above the moon, 390 million miles away. Full Story (Daily Mail)
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Airbus Predicts Record Jet Output Post-Pandemic
7 October 2021
Reuters reports that Airbus “is sticking to its quest for record jet output after airlines reported glimmers of a post-pandemic recovery this week, and believes engine makers who have questioned its most ambitious proposals will be ‘unable to resist’ demand.” Airbus “has said it hopes to almost double jet production in a few years as borders
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NASA to Launch DART Planetary Defense Mission November 23
6 October 2021
CNN reports that NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) will “lift off at 10:20 p.m. PT on November 23 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California.” After launching in November, “NASA will test its asteroid deflection technology in September 2022 to see how it impacts the motion of a near-Earth
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General Dynamics Unveils Two Gulfstream Business Jets
6 October 2021
Reuters reports that General Dynamics has unveiled “two new Gulfstream aircraft, as it looks to tap a rebound in demand for business jets after the pandemic shrunk orders.” The company, “which introduced the jets on Monday, described the Gulfstream G800 as the longest-range aircraft in the Gulfstream fleet and the Gulfstream G400 as the first new