Your home for critical insights and analysis on technological advancements, program development and emerging trends propelling the global aerospace & defense industry forward. Find out what’s next with our flagship publication.

AW&ST HUB | AEROSPACE | DEFENSE | SPACE | COMMERCIAL AVIATION | MRO

SUBSCRIBE NOW

 

Latest Space Content By Aviation Week & Space Technology

Jul 30, 2012
NASA is pressing to use everything from robots to Russians in an effort to stretch the crew time available on the U.S. side of the International Space Station for research. William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for human exploration and operations, says he is “narrowing down” the list of candidates he will select as early as this week for the agency's Commercial Crew Integrated Capability effort, which will provide substantial seed money for at least three private efforts to deliver crews to the ISS as early as 2015.
Jul 30, 2012
Tiny planet-finder has sophisticated software, COTS elements
Jul 30, 2012
Robert J. Stevens, Lockheed Martin's CEO, went to Capitol Hill on July 18 to deliver a warning: If Congress does nothing to halt another $500 billion in automatic cuts to U.S. defense spending due to begin next January under a process known as “sequestration,” the Pentagon's largest contractor will be forced to hand out 10,000 pink slips, riffing 8% of its workforce.
Jul 30, 2012
Launch-service providers see a new market in growing acceptance of small satellites
Jul 30, 2012
Even as the congressional clock ticks away, a bill to prevent U.S. airlines from paying the EU for carbon emissions may yet receive attention. The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee is expected to mark up the bill aimed at blocking the EU's emissions trading system (ETS) on July 31. “If we could get a good, strong vote out of the committee, it would increase the likelihood we could get it voted on the floor,” says bill co-sponsor Sen.
Jul 30, 2012
International Space Station Expedition 32 crewmembers should be unloading supplies and equipment this week from the third of Japan's H-II Transfer Vehicles (HTV-3) following its launch July 20 from the Tanegashima Space Center in southeast Japan. Carrying 4.6 tons of cargo, the Kounotori supply ship was scheduled to rendezvous with the orbiting science lab on July 27.
Jul 23, 2012
Nearly 10 years have passed since Raytheon lost a contract to Boeing for the U.S. Air Force's next generation of satcom terminals. Known as FAB-T (Family of Advanced Beyond-line-of-sight Terminals), the program, estimated at $4.7 billion, will facilitate communications between military aircraft and the Pentagon's new Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellite constellation.
Jul 23, 2012
Orbiter would launch on a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle