Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — The Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University is aiming for a March 2011 decision on the site for a third domestic campus, either at the Greater Rockford Airport near Chicago or Ellington Field in Houston. The envisioned 1,000-student campus would offer undergraduate degree programs in aerospace and mechanical engineering, aeronautical science and homeland security as well as graduate offerings in systems engineering, aeronautical science and aviation. The private university envisions a residential and commuter campus.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Passage of legislation authorizing NASA spending for the next three years means the agency’s Constellation Program of back-to-the-Moon spacecraft developments is officially over, but some of its work will continue as the agency shifts its focus to sending humans to an asteroid.

Graham Warwick
BIDS IN: Boeing and Lockheed Martin/Kaman have submitted bids to provide cargo resupply services to the U.S. Marine Corps in Afghanistan using unmanned helicopters. Boeing has proposed new-build A160T Hummingbirds off the company-funded production line in Mesa, Ariz., while Lockheed and Kaman have offered the K-Max and propose using “available assets” as the external-lift helicopter is not in production.

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Anantha Krishnan M.
Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) has a new human resources leader, after the former HR director quit in April. R. Srinivasan became the new HR chief on Sept. 30 and will hold the position until his retirement in May 2011. Srinivasan was the managing director for HAL’s Helicopter Complex and is returning from an extended medical leave. There also are reports emerging on the future of D. Shivamurti, whose tenure as finance director comes up for renewal this month. HAL directors are reviewed every five years.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The Germany military expects to deploy its Mantis counter-rocket, artillery and mortar (C-RAM) system to Afghanistan in 2012. The air force, which is taking over responsibility for that mission area next year, will deploy the system to protect the German base in Kunduz. Mantis should become operational in 2011. The German government has ordered two C-RAMs from Rheinmetall, which is an evolution of the Skyshield system.

Staff
ISR DOWN: As U.K. government officials plan to retire the country’s five new Raytheon-built, Sentinel R-1 radar, ground-surveillance aircraft under the Strategic Defense and Security Review, some suggest the Lockheed Martin F-35. But one U.S. insider disputes the notion. “The notion that the F-35 can provide the coverage [and endurance] that Sentinel can is the product of a staffer who has no idea of physics and the capabilities of either aircraft,” says a U.S.-based intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance specialist with insight into the program.

Robert Wall
METEOR TEST: The Swedish defense armaments agency, FMV, notes that the eighth Meteor missile firing was recently completed from a Gripen during trials at the Vidsel test range in the north of the country. “The purpose of the test was to verify the model on separation of the missile from the aircraft. The impact from the missile exhaust plume on the aircraft engine was also studied,” according to FMV. The datalink’s performance also was verified. The test shot completes the second phase of Sweden’s effort to integrate Meteor on Gripen.

Kristin Majcher
LUNAR ICE: New findings from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) confirm the presence of water ice in both the Moon’s permanently shadowed regions as well as areas that receive occasional sunlight. Analysis of data captured by LRO and LCROSS when the latter mission purposely crashed its spent Centaur upper stage into the Moon’s Cabeus crater shows that volatiles including methane, hydrogen gas, carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide made up more than 20% of the resulting impact plume.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The French government is in the final stages of awarding a contract for integration of the MBDA Meteor ramjet powered air-to-air missile on the Rafale strike fighter, according to a French defense ministry official. France would be the second country to pay to integrate the weapon onto its combat aircraft, following Sweden, which recently made the decision to do so on the JAS-39 Gripen.

Robert Wall
LONDON — Airbus CEO Tom Enders is applauding the British government for its willingness to go through with sweeping budget cuts unveiled in recent days. “I’d like to salute the courage of your government for such deep cuts,” he tells the U.K.’s Aviation Club. “The decisions made on equipment cannot be translated into an anti-aerospace policy.”

By Irene Klotz
Testing for Virgin Galactic’s planned commercial suborbital spaceflight service extends beyond expanding the flight envelopes of SpaceShipTwo and the WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft — the company has been “testing” its first group of customers, some 370 people from 35 countries who have paid or put down deposits for the $200,000 ride.

Alexey Komarov, Frank Morring, Jr.
MOSCOW — Russian technicians are running electrical checks on the Soyuz TMA-20 capsule at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, after replacing its descent module as a precaution against damage it may have sustained in a rail mishap en route to the launch site. A state commission decided to substitute the descent module from Soyuz TMA-21, which was essentially ready for shipment, after workers found the original module’s shipping container had been damaged during the trip from Moscow.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The full financial impact on BAE Systems of the U.K. government spending review is not yet known, but the company says it is expecting only “relatively modest adjustments to its overall financial outlook from these changes.” Still, the Strategic Defense and Security Review (SDSR) is “expected to result in some reduction in growth in 2010,” the company says in an interim management statement issued Oct. 21.

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — Japan plans to increase its submarine fleet to 24 boats from the current 18, Kyodo News reports. The larger submarine force will increase the country’s capacity to maintain patrols in nearby water, especially the East China Sea, the news agency reports amid a period of unusually tense relations with China. The country will do this by extending the operational lives of its submarines, which have traditionally been kept short to hold down the size of the fleet while maintaining a building rate of one a year.

Neelam Mathews
NEW DELHI — Eurocopter’s new subsidiary in New Delhi is part of its strategy to step up sales and marketing efforts in India. Established Oct. 20, the New Delhi location is Eurocopter’s tenth subsidiary in Asia. Eurocopter also has signed an agreement to establish a joint maintenance, repair and overhaul venture in Mumbai with Indian government-owned Pawan Hans Helicopters. The MRO should be operational by the end of 2011.

Paul McLeary
The U.S. Marine Corps is about to get leaner, according to Lt. Gen. George Flynn, deputy commandant for combat development and integration, who says the service is planning on ditching 10,000 of the current 42,000 tactical vehicles it has in its fleet. The Marines have some tough decisions to make when it comes to their ground vehicle fleet. The biggest involves the beleaguered Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle (EFV), the $2.5 billion, decades-long effort to replace the Amphibious Assault Vehicle.

Anantha Krishnan M.
BENGALURU, India — Indian officials see the offset provision in its future defense contracts as an ideal vehicle to forge partnerships with U.S. industries, establishing a long-term supply chain not only for the country but for global markets. This was the general tone prevailing at the one-day, high-level meeting in Bengalaru between U.S. defense buyers and suppliers and various Indian aerospace companies organized by the American Chamber of Commerce in India (Aerospace DAILY, Oct. 20).

Graham Warwick
ABL FIZZLES: Another attempt to shoot down a ballistic missile using the Boeing YAL-1 Airborne Laser Test Bed failed Oct. 21 when the system did not transition from tracking the target missile’s rocket plume to active tracking. The megawatt-class chemical laser was not fired, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency says. MDA says it is also investigating the “intermittent performance” of a valve in the laser system. A Sept. 1 attempt to shoot down a liquid-fueled missile was terminated early when corrupted beam-control software steered the laser off center. The first test on Feb.

David A. Fulghum
News from the cyber front has been universally bad for the last several years, but there is now hope of progress “in the next several months,” as the U.S. Defense Department rolls out its plans for organizing its cyber operations, says Robert Butler, deputy assistant secretary of defense for cyber policy. “We have a strategy moving forward and a series of operating concepts under consideration that will come together inside a planning and progressing discussion over the next several months,” Butler says.

Robert Wall
LONDON — The British government’s Comprehensive Spending Review specifies a £35.7 billion ($56 billion) defense topline spending budget for fiscal years 2010-2011, with slight increases in the coming two years before a reversal again sets in.