Aviation International News reports, “Over the 12 months between Sept. 1, 2021, and Aug. 31, 2022, eight people died in two accidents of U.S.-registered business jets being operated under Part 91 and 19 people lost their lives in three crashes of non-U.S.-registered business jets flying charters.” In all, there were 188 accidents and 98 investigated incidents involving turbine business airplanes globally. Fatal and non-fatal accidents worldwide totaled 35, of which 20 occurred during private operations. Business turboprops were involved in 64 accidents worldwide, nearly twice that of jets, and resulted in 62 fatalities, roughly 2.5 that of jets.
Full Story (Aviation International News)
Tag: October 2022
Rocket Lab Launches NOAA-Funded Wildlife Tracking Satellite
Spaceflight Now reported, “Rocket Lab launched an Electron rocket Friday from its privately-run spaceport in New Zealand, boosting a 260-pound satellite into orbit on a $64 million NOAA-funded mission to relay environmental data from remote weather stations and help track global wildlife movements.” The mission is the latest in a line of Argos environmental data relay satellite launches, and is a partnership between General Atomics, NOAA, and CNES (the French space agency). The mission sent the GAzelle satellite into a polar orbit about 466 miles above Earth, where it is planned to operate for five years.
Full Story (Spaceflight Now)
SpaceX Falcon Heavy Could Launch This Month After Three-Year Wait
Spaceflight Now reports, “More than three years after SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy rocket last blazed a path into orbit, the 28-engine launcher is finally set to fly again as soon as Oct. 28 from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on a long-delayed national security mission for the U.S. Space Force, a military spokesperson said.” The Falcon Heavy mission “is expected to be the next launch from Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy following the liftoff Wednesday of a Falcon 9 rocket and a Dragon capsule carrying a crew of four to the International Space Station. SpaceX ground teams at pad 39A will prepare the pad for the Falcon Heavy, which has a different configuration than the Falcon 9 with three Falcon rocket boosters connected together to triple the launcher’s total thrust.” Spaceflight Now adds that the delay between Falcon Heavy launches is due to a lack of payloads for the rocket.
Full Story (Spaceflight Now)
2022 ASCEND Adds Preeminent Space Leaders from Government, Academia, and Industry to Event
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 11, 2022 – Reston, Va. – ASCEND, the world’s premier outcomes-focused, interdisciplinary space event designed to accelerate building our off-world future faster, today announced more speakers from across the space ecosystem for the 2022 ASCEND apex event, 24–26 October at Caesars Forum, Las Vegas, and online. The packed three-day agenda boasts nearly 400 speakers.
National security space leaders added
- Asha Balakrishnan, Assistant Director, Science and Technology Policy Institute, Institute for Defense Analyses (IDA)
- Col. El Gardner, Director, Space Strategy and Policy, U.S. Space Force (USSF)
- David Gauthier, Director, Commercial and Business Operations, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA)
- Jeremy Leader, Director, Commercial Services Office, Space Systems Command, USSF
- Maj. Gen. John Olson, Mobilization Assistant to the Chief of Space Operations and Lead on JADC2 & ABMS, USSF; and Chief Data and Artificial Intelligence Officer, U.S. Air Force
- Col. Joseph Roth, USSF, Director, Innovation and Prototyping Delta and Senior Materiel Leader/Commander SSC Detachment 1, Space Systems Command
Space industry leaders added
- Uyen Dinh, Vice President, Government Relations and Strategy, BlackSky
- Bill Gerstenmaier, Vice President, Build and Flight Reliability, SpaceX
- Jessica Jensen, Vice President, Customer Operations and Integration, SpaceX
- Michael Mineiro, Vice President, Legal, Regulatory, and Government Affairs, HawkEye 360 Inc.
- Jamie Morin, Executive Director, Center for Space Policy and Strategy; and Vice President, Defense Systems Operations, The Aerospace Corporation
- Mark Mozena, Vice President, Government Affairs, Planet
- Matt Ondler, Chief Technology Officer, Axiom Space
- Kirk Shireman, Vice President, Lunar Exploration Campaign, Lockheed Martin
- Al Tadros, Chief Technology Officer, Redwire Space
- Russ Teehan, Kuiper Government Solutions Principal Solutions Architect, Amazon
- Jake Thompson, Chief Engineer Novel Nuclear and Head of Innovation, Rolls-Royce
Adjacent industries leaders added
- Norm Follett, Senior Director, Global Technical Marketing, Space Technology & Solutions, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE)
- Robert (Ribby) Goodfellow, Director, Corporate Purpose Communications, Colgate-Palmolive Company
U.S. civil space leaders added
- Robert (Bob) Gibbs, Associate Administrator, Mission Support Directorate, NASA
- Elaine Ho, Deputy Associate Administrator, Office of STEM Engagement, NASA
- Joseph Pelfrey, Deputy Director, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
International space agency leaders added
- Peter Gräf, Director Applications and Science, German Space Agency (DLR)
- Susann Groß, Head of Programme Space R&D, German Aerospace Center (DLR)
- Air Commodore Nicholas Hogan, Director General, Space Capability, Australian Defence Force
- Krunal Joshi, Counsellor, Space (ISRO), Embassy of India
- Nicolas Maubert, Space Counselor to the French Embassy and CNES Representative in the United States
- Masami Onada, Director, Washington D.C. Office, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)
- Jill Smyth, Counselor, Space Affairs, Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
- Éric Vachon, Director General, Space Science and Technology, Canadian Space Agency (CSA)
Media Contact: Rebecca B. Gray, [email protected], 804-397-5270 cell
About ASCEND
Powered by AIAA, ASCEND, which stands for Accelerating Space Commerce, Exploration, and New Discovery, is the world’s premier collaborative, outcomes-driven, interdisciplinary community designed to accelerate the building of our off-world future. For more information, visit ascend.events, or follow ASCEND on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram.
About AIAA
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit aiaa.org, or follow AIAA on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram.