Tag: January 2025

Boeing Resumes 777X Test Flights

Reuters reports, “Boeing resumed testing for its long-delayed 777X widebody jet on Thursday, with the first flight since the U.S. planemaker grounded the test fleet in August due to the failure of a key engine mounting structure. The grounding came just five weeks after it had started certification flights for the 777-9 with officials from the U.S. aviation regulator onboard.”
Full Story (Reuters)

SpaceX Starship Rocket Is Lost During 7th Test Launch, Causing Debris to Fall

The New York Times reports, “The seventh test flight of SpaceX’s Starship rocket failed on Thursday as the vehicle’s upper stage experienced a catastrophic malfunction as it headed upward to space. SpaceX was able to achieve some success by repeating the feat of catching the gargantuan Super Heavy booster back at the launchpad.”
Full Story (New York Times – Subscription Publication)

 

 

 

 

 

Video

A SpaceX Starship rocket exploded shortly after launching on its seventh test flight.
(Brut IndiaYouTube)

Blue Origin’s New Glenn Rocket Launches on its Inaugural Flight

Scientific American reports, “A few minutes after 2:00 A.M. EST, a hulking, 320-foot-tall rocket slipped its tethers at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and heaved itself into the sky on a bluish-white pillar of flame, briefly turning night into day along the eastern shore of Florida’s Space Coast. About 8 minutes later, the rocket’s large, first-stage booster failed to stick its landing on a barge in the Atlantic—not exactly the desired outcome, but not unusual for the first attempt to land a booster upright.”
Full Story (Scientific American)
More Info (AIAA Statement)

 

 

 

Video

New Glenn at liftoff during the NG-1 mission, January 16, 2025.  (Launch at 04:00:41 mark)
(NASASpaceflightYouTube)

Volatus Aerospace Launches “Surveillance as a Service” UAV Solution

Unmanned Systems Technology reports, “Volatus Aerospace Inc. has launched its new ‘Surveillance as a Service’ solution, aiming to deliver unparalleled scalability and rapid deployment capabilities. Monitored from Volatus’ state-of-the-art Operations Control Centre (OCC), this flexible, secure and multi-modal surveillance offering empowers clients with faster response times and actionable intelligence.”
Full Story (Unmanned Systems Technology)

Saab Providing Drone Swarming Capability for Sweden’s Armed Forces

Aviation Week reports, “Sweden’s armed forces have revealed a secret drone swarming program using software developed by Saab. The system, developed over the past year, is designed for sub-25-kg (55.1 lb.) uncrewed aircraft systems (UAS). It allows individual soldiers to control as many as 100 drones at a time to gather intelligence, defense officials say.”
Full Story (Aviation Week)

SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches Two Private Moon Landers at Once

The New York Times reports, “A space twofer took place early Wednesday morning — two lunar missions for the price of one rocket launch. A SpaceX Falcon 9 lifted off from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 1:11 a.m. Eastern time, carrying the Blue Ghost lander built by Firefly Aerospace of Austin, Texas, and the Resilience lander from Ispace of Japan.”
Full Story (The New York Times – Subscription Publication)

 

 

 

 

Video

SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches Firefly Blue Ghost & HAKUTO-R M2 “Resilience”  (Launch at 00:56:42 mark)
(NASASpaceflightYouTube)

FAA Introduces Downwash Caution Area for Vertiports

Aviation Week reports “When the FAA released draft updated engineering guidelines for vertiports in September 2024, it introduced the requirement for a caution area to provide protection from the high wind velocities produced by the propellers of electric air taxis during vertical takeoffs and landings. The introduction of the downwash caution area (DCA) was the result of flight surveys of multiple prototype electric vertical-takeoff-and-landing (eVTOL) aircraft for the FAA.”
Full Story (Aviation Week)

SpaceX Launches Another 21 Starlink Satellites on Falcon 9 from Cape Canaveral

Spaceflight Now reports, “SpaceX kicked off a busy launch week that features flights from all four of its launch pads between California, Florida and Texas. Assuming no launch slips, it will launch three Falcon 9 rockets and the seventh flight test of its Starship-Super Heavy rocket. First up was the Starlink 12-4 mission, which launched from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Liftoff happened at 11:47 a.m. EST (1647 UTC).”
Full Story (Spaceflight Now)

 

 

 

 

Video

SpaceX Falcon 9 launches 21 Starlink satellites from Cape Canaveral  (Launch at 00:59:25 mark)
(Spaceflight NowYouTube)

The ‘Golden Age’ of AI and Autonomy

Panel Highlights Critical Role of AI and Autonomy on Earth and in Space

By Anne Wainscott-Sargent, AIAA Communications Team

ORLANDO, Fla. – In the future artificial intelligence (AI) and autonomous systems will transform how people and assets are tracked, whether on Earth or in space, noted speakers on an AIAA SciTech Forum plenary on AI and Autonomy last Thursday, 9 January.

Watch Full Session On Demand 

Advances in real-time monitoring and connectivity will help first responders act fast, said one panelist, recalling a 2012 Sausalito, California, road fatality caused when a man crashed his car following a heart attack. He was traveling alone at night, with no one aware of his location.

“In a world where we have a fully connected comms system, that plays out very differently,” said Eric Smith, senior principal, Remote Sensing and Data Analytics at Lockheed Martin Space.

Redefining Accident Response

Not only would AI wearable tech proactively monitor the man’s medical condition, it also would alert EMS and even coordinate traffic control systems to ensure the speediest response to his location.

The plenary session highlighted advancements in AI and their applications in simulation, safety, and decision making, as well as how autonomous systems are reshaping the future of space exploration.

“This is a golden age for robotics and autonomy,” noted Marco Pavone, lead autonomous vehicle researcher at Nvidia and an associate professor at Stanford University in the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

His focus is fourfold: 1) develop visual language models for vehicle autonomy architectures, 2) find other ways of architecting autonomous tasks, 3) explore simulation technologies to enable end-to-end simulation of autonomous tasks in a realistic and controllable way, and 4) research AI safety – building safe and trustworthy AI systems, particularly in space systems and self-driving cars.

Pavone also co-founded a new center at Stanford – the Center for AEroSpace Autonomy Research (CAESAR), which was formed to advance the state of the art by infusing autonomous reasoning capabilities in aerospace systems.

“At the center we are looking at AI techniques for constructions tasks for other space systems and we’re even developing space foundation models that take into account specific inputs and outputs,” he said.

Lockheed Martin is using AI in all four domains of its business – Space, Missiles and Fire Control, Rotary Systems, and Aeronautics. The company envisions AI for autonomy in unstructured environments like the surface of the moon or Mars, with multiagent cooperative autonomy for manufacturing and assembly.

Smart Robots Likely to Precede Humans to Mars

“I foresee the first habitable, critical infrastructure on the surface of Mars being constructed by a team of robots using material and tools and high-level instructions that say, ‘Do the following things’ [in preparation] for humans to arrive,” said Smith.

On the ground, autonomy and AI advances will play an important role in land-use monitoring, to manage and coordinate disaster response and asset tracking, and will work even if objects pass under bridges or under cloud cover. Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control has a department called Advanced Autonomy concerned with autonomous ground vehicles.

Better Fire Prediction and Detection

According to Smith, the group is exploring advanced technologies to help firefighters better predict, detect, and fight wildfires. The technology could predict and locate a fire hours before it even starts from a lightning strike. Using the power of AI, Lockheed’s technology could also analyze fire behavior in near real-time to enable fire growth predictions and to deliver persistent communications across multiagency air and land suppression units, so they might respond quicker to a large complex fire. Unfortunately, the technology is only in test mode; it’s not currently helping fight the fires ravaging southern California, said Smith.

Moderator Julie Shah, Department Head and H.N. Slater Professor in Aeronautics and Astronautics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), discussed how much the world has changed in the context of AI over the last two decades.

Continually Evolving AI Systems

“When I did my Ph.D., it was on automated planning and scheduling with no machine learning,” recalled Shah. “When I started my career on faculty, I remember a colleague at NASA told me … nothing that learns online will ever fly in space. In the blink of an eye, a few years later, all I did in my lab was machine learning.”

Pavone agreed with Shah that future aerospace missions, especially for space exploration, will need AI systems that can continue to evolve and learn after they deploy.

“Adaptation is needed and so that’s something we are working on,” said Pavone, noting that his lab is collaborating with The Aerospace Corporation on AI systems that can serve anomalies – “How do you use those anomalies to train your system on the ground so that you can still do validation and then improve it?”

Following the panel, Pavone emphasized that foundation models, dark language, and vision language models all provide “several opportunities to rethink how we build autonomous systems.”

He pointed to several breakthroughs in simulation technologies, which will make simulation a powerful tool of autonomous systems.

Aerospace: Lessons from Automotive’s AI Experience

Pavone added that while the application domain he focuses on at Nvidia is primarily automotive (self-driving cars), aerospace researchers can learn from the automotive industry.

“The automotive [industry] has been building AI systems for a while now, and they have built quite a bit of competence in terms of which AI system should be fielded and also how to provide that they are safe and reliable. So, both the methodologies and the safety standards that have been developed  by the automotive community could be useful for the aerospace community,” he said.

Forum Attendees Weigh In On AI

Following the plenary, Jorge Hernandez, president of Texas-based Bastion Technologies, said, “Just the opportunity to hear how different organizations are working with AI was fantastic. What Stanford, Lockheed, and MIT are doing is exceptional. We’re all interested in seeing how that will impact us in the future…and we’re all interested getting involved.”

His firm focuses on safety and mission assurance and mechanical engineering, said Hernandez. “We get involved on the risk and analysis side, so how AI plays into that will be an important piece of what we do.”

Rudy Al Ahmar, a PhD student who is completing his aerospace engineering studies at Auburn University’s Advanced Propulsion Research Laboratory this semester, agreed with the panelists – there was a lot of skepticism about AI and machine learning five years ago, but those concerns were addressed within a few years.  The same thing has happened with generative AI.

“For a lot of scientists and researchers, it’s not a matter of if they’re going to use AI and machine learning, it’s a matter of when and how they’re going to implement it – whether on a large scale or small scale,” he said.

The doctoral candidate said he hopes to research AI and machine learning integration with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) as a university assistant professor.

“It’s computationally demanding to work on these aerospace applications with CFD. AI and machine learning can reduce the computational cost and make things rapid so you can optimize and study things much, much quicker.”

 On Demand Recording Available

Watch Full Session On Demand 

Latest Boom Supersonic Test Paves Way for 1st Mach 1 Flight

Aerotime reports Boom Supersonic is “determining whether a 12th test flight of its XB-1 demonstrator is needed before its first attempt at breaking the speed barrier. On January 10, 2025, XB-1 reached speeds of Mach 0.95 during a 44-minute flight over the Mojave Desert with Chief Test Pilot Tristan ‘Geppetto’ Brandenburg at the controls.”
Full Story (Aerotime)