Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Nov. 9 - 10 — Defense Logistics, Crowne Plaza Hotel - St. James, London, London, U.K. For more information go to www.smi-online.co.uk Nov. 10 - 12 — SAE International’s Aerotech Congress and Exhibition, “Global Aerospace Solutions for a More Efficient Future,” Washington State Convention and Trade Center, Seattle, Wa. For more information go to www./sae.org/aerotech

By Joe Anselmo
With U.S. defense spending leveling off and the direction of a cash-strapped NASA in limbo, there is much talk these days about expansion into “adjacent markets” as aerospace and defense companies look for new ways to drive growth. That explains why Jim Maser, the president of United Technologies Corp.’s Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne (PWR), spent much of a meeting with Aviation Week editors last week talking about the company’s ventures into solar power, coal gasification and oil extraction.

Staff
CHINA MILSPACE: China’s air force continues to take an aggressive stance on space control, even as it opens a dialogue with its U.S. counterpart aimed at increasing transparency. In widely reported remarks, Gen.

Staff
MOOT POINT: What will the Pentagon’s upcoming Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR) say in regards to unmanned aircraft and other remotely or autonomously controlled vehicles? Who cares, says a panel of industry heavyweights at Aviation Week’s A&D Programs conference in Phoenix last week.

Staff
DISTRIBUTED POWER: Efforts like the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s (Darpa) recently announced award to the first person to identify the locations of 10 red balloons tethered in undisclosed U.S. locations (Aerospace DAILY, Oct. 30) illustrate the potential superiority of Internet communications and social networking over some traditional weapons platforms, according to new Darpa Director Regina Dugan.

Staff
AUTOMOTIVE NAVY: Qualified displaced auto workers in Detroit, Mich., will soon be receiving follow-up calls from the U.S. Navy to schedule interviews for various engineering positions as well as spots in Naval Acquisition Associates Program (NAAP), a two-year developmental program design to prepare mid-level professionals to transition to Navy acquisition careers. Naval Sea Systems Command had so much success with its first attempt to recruit out-of-work automotive professionals in April that it returned to Michigan in late October to do it again.

Staff
CYBER-INSPECTIONS: The Pentagon’s new director of industrial policy, Brett Lambert, suggests administering Defense Contract Audit Agency-type inspections at companies to assess their cyber-preparedness. Speaking at Aviation Week’s A&D Programs conference in Phoenix last week, Lambert said there is a need to get companies to volunteer more information about preparations for being attacked in cyberspace. The issue has been highlighted by the revelation that federal agencies and U.S.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Masten Space Systems, fresh from a million-dollar win in the NASA-sponsored Lunar Lander X-Prize Challenge, hopes to use its vertical-takeoff-and-landing rocket technology to launch a commercial enterprise by the middle of next year. Dave Masten, founder and CEO of the five-year-old Mojave, Calif., company, said Friday the company will use the $1.15 million it won by taking first place in the Level 2 lander competition and second place in Level 1 to upgrade its Xoie (pronounced “Zoey”) vehicle for higher and faster flight (Aerospace DAILY, Nov. 4).

Staff
STADD SENTENCED: Courtney A. Stadd, who served as NASA chief of staff and White House liaison under former Administrator Sean O’Keefe, has been sentenced to three years probation, six months of electronic monitoring and a $2,500 fine for breaking ethics laws, according to a report from the Associated Press. Stadd was convicted of violating federal conflict-of-interest law in directing some $9.6 million in agency funds to a consulting client (Aerospace DAILY, March 9). U.S.

Robert Wall
The German defense ministry has ordered a surveillance system to provide added protection to its military bases and semi-permanent camps, as its deployed military units in Afghanistan increasingly are coming under attack. Rheinmetall is leading a group that also includes Thales’s German arm and Diehl BGT Defense. A prototype system is to be installed at the military base in Meppen Germany and is slated to be operational on July 1, 2010.

U.S. Government Accountability Office
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U.S. Government Accountability Office
Click here to view the pdf

Staff
SHOOTING ELECTRONS: “The first shot fired in a conflict is no longer a bullet. It’s an electron,” argues Stephen Hogan, vice president of Northrop Grumman Information Operations and Electronic Attack. The company is pitching the U.S. Navy its bid for the Next Generation Jammer, and Northrop believes a win could mean “hundreds of millions of dollars” in revenue. The Navy should choose up to four competitors for technology maturation contracts in the first quarter of 2010. A downselect is eyed for 2011, when the Navy is expected to award two technology demonstration awards.

Michael Fabey
Engine issues continue to factor into more U.S. Army aviation mishaps that any other aircraft part or system, according to an Aerospace DAILY analysis of service data. Engine-related accidents and incidents also continue to be the most costly. The Army identified engine problems in 707 mishaps between Jan. 1, 2008, and July 28, 2009, according to data provided by the Army Combat Readiness/Safety Center (USACRC).

Michael A. Taverna
CHINESE HANDSHAKE: The Bolivian government has concluded a memorandum of understanding with China Great Wall Industry Corp. (CGWIC) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) to prepare the way for construction and deployment of a Bolivian telecom satellite, Tupac Katari. CGWIC would supply and launch the satellite under an in-orbit delivery arrangement and the ITU would help provide a suitable orbital slot.

Michael A. Taverna
MORE JUICE: Battery-maker Saft has announced a 120 million euro ($180 million) capital increase to help build two new U.S. plants, including a Jacksonville, Fla., facility that will be dedicated to lithium-ion batteries for aerospace and defense applications. The increase will be funded through a rights issue priced at 21 euros a share that will be open until Nov. 19. Half of the Jacksonville plant will be funded by the U.S. Energy Dept. under an American Recovery and Reinvestment Act application approved in August.

Michael A. Taverna
IRIDIUM BID: Thales Alenia Space has picked Ball Aerospace to be its partner in the event the Franco-Italian contractor is selected to provide Iridium’s next-generation satellite system. Ball says it would assemble, integrate and test spacecraft for the program. Thales Alenia is vying with Lockheed Martin for the program, which is to be awarded towards year’s end. Ball also will advise Thales Alenia on potential civil and military hosted payload opportunities.

Futron Corp.
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Staff
MINI-MODULE: A Soyuz rocket is set to lift off Nov. 10 from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan with Russia’s “Poisk” mini-research module, setting up an automatic docking of the 8-ton spacecraft at the International Space Station at 10:44 a.m. EST Nov. 12. In its planned position on the Zvezda Service Module, Poisk will serve as another docking port for visiting Russian vehicles, beginning with a Soyuz crew capsule in January 2010, and as an airlock for Russia-side spacewalks.

David A. Fulghum
There are still many knots and kinks in reorganizing the Pentagon for the next phase of the fight in Afghanistan. Some of the problems, like increasing the Predator unmanned reconnaissance aircraft capability to 50 orbits, seem simple but are not. There are many runways and facilities in sea-level Iraq, but not in mountainous Afghanistan. Planners also complain that there is no concept of operations that would divide those capabilities between theaters.

Andy Nativi Andy
GENOA, Italy — The market downturn is not affecting Finmeccanica so far, with the company expecting to match its whole-year financial guidelines for 2009. U.S. subsidiary DRS Technologies’ contribution is becoming more and more important for the overall defense electronic segment. Financial debts increased in the third quarter, but are manageable after efforts to lengthen debt duration and reduce financial cost.

By Bradley Perrett
Qian Xuesen, a U.S.-trained rocket scientist who became the father of the Chinese space program, died on Oct. 31, aged 98. Qian, whose name is sometimes spelled as Tsien Hsue-shen, was born in Hangzhou, China, moved to the United States in 1935 and became an early researcher in rocketry. During and immediately after World War Two, the sudden importance of jet propulsion and rocketry in catapulted him to the highest levels of the U.S. military scientific establishment, even though he was a foreigner.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Six NASA astronauts will use the next-to-last mission of the space shuttle Atlantis to begin preparing the International Space Station (ISS) for the day when there will be no shuttles to keep the station supplied.

Amy Butler
OMAHA, Neb. — Citing the resource-constrained U.S. Army budget, the general overseeing the Army’s Space and Missile Defense Command says he would prefer the U.S. Navy to assume oversight and execution of the mission to land-base SM-3 Block IB ballistic missile killers in Europe for protection against an Iranian attack. “Today, we have a number of priorities that we have trouble meeting outside of missile defense,” Campbell said during a Nov. 3 interview with Aviation Week.