Hubble Space Telescope Controllers hope to be able to restart science observations on the orbiting observatory by about Oct. 24, after a pair of last-minute anomalies forced them to suspend recovery from an earlier on-board failure that has kept the telescope out of commission since Sept. 27.
The list of possible headquarter bases for U.S. Air Force Cyber Command will be winnowed down and evaluated more closely over the next three to four months, according to Maj. Gen. William Lord, chief of the provisional command.
LATE DELIVERY: Defense Minister Herve Morin says France may cede some ground on penalties that EADS is liable to incur for late delivery of the A400M airlifter under its fixed-price contract. Penalties already have led to €1.4 billion in write-downs, and with deliveries slipping further to the right, they are likely to increase. But EADS CEO Louis Gallois has threatened to stop work on the A400M if penalties for delays, which he says are not entirely EADS’s fault, are not waived or reduced.
Four developmental live-fire tests remain before the AGM-88E Advanced Anti-Radiation Guided Missile (AARGM) enters a nine-month operational evaluation by the U.S. Navy next spring, program manager Capt. Larry Egbert says. Development of the AARGM upgrade to the basic High-Speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM) now used by Navy and Air Force strike aircraft missile is estimated at $566 million.
The U.S. Homeland Security Department is becoming a prime collector of domestic intelligence, but obtaining funding for information-sharing needs remains an issue both in terms of equipment and personnel, according to a senior DHS official.
PARIS – Eumetsat has OK’d a payload for Europe’s third-generation geostationary weather satellite system, MTG, that will serve as a baseline for a full development and operation program proposal to be submitted for approval later this year.
Engineers and technicians have reinstalled the 2.5-meter telescope mirror for NASA’s Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), a modified 747SP, at NASA Dryden’s Aircraft Operations Facility in Palmdale, Calif.
PATCHED UP: A minor hydrogen leak on a U.S. Air Force/United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket discovered during a countdown dress rehearsal with the vehicle on Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral has been traced to a bleed line not involved with in-flight propulsion. Technicians tightened a B-nut clamp at the location of the leak, halting the problem. Another countdown test with the vehicle filled with oxygen and hydrogen propellant confirmed that the leak was stopped when the clamp was tightened.
Alliant Techsystems (ATK) has reached an agreement with United Space Alliance (USA) that USA will perform subcontractor support to ATK for NASA’s Ares I launch vehicle. USA has been supporting ATK under a $257 million letter contract until a more formal contract is completed in 60-90 days, said Michael Kahn, executive vice president and general manager, ATK Launch Systems. Kahn spoke in Promontory, Utah, during a teleconference Oct. 16. The contract will run until 2014.
TARGETED WIN: GenCorp’s Aerojet has been awarded a U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) contract for the Kill Vehicle (KV) Commonality Pathfinder Divert and Attitude Control System (DACS). The propulsion system is designed to control the KV by firing individual thrusters while homing for an intercept with a ballistic missile or its warhead, according to the company.
BETHESDA, Md. – The U.S. Coast Guard still is mulling its unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) options – including a land-based Predator – but one of the agency’s top acquisition officials predicts the new National Security Cutter (NSC) will eventually carry a shipborne unmanned aircraft.
A DOD Configuration Steering Board meeting scheduled for Oct. 22 will determine the future of the Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munition (DPICM), currently in full-rate production, which violates new rules against cluster munitions.
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. – Development on the next phase of the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile (JASSM), which until only recently was hanging in the balance, is continuing with a recent flight-test of an extended-range version of the stealthy cruise missile. During the test late last month at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., a B-1 bomber launched the missile and it navigated through a preplanned route, striking the target, according to program officials. During this test, developers verified new hardware and software for the system.
NASA AUTHORIZED: President Bush signed new authorizing legislation for NASA Oct. 15. The policy bill (H.R. 6063) requires NASA to add two space shuttle logisticts flights to the International Space Station to its baseline flight manifest and “take all necessary steps to fly a third” mission. It also requires the agency to take steps to ensure that the station remains viable through at least 2020.
Paradise Point Resort & Spa San Diego, CA November 12-14, 2008 A new U.S. President – what it means to the A&D industry Just one week after the 2008 Presidential Election, AVIATION WEEK will provide insight into the new administration and what it means to the A&D industry – from impact on research programs to shifts in priorities. Learn more at www.aviationweek.com/conferences or call +1.212.904.4483.
Part of Iraq’s military future airborne strike capability appears to be flying out of a civilian airport in Fort Worth, Texas. Two Cessna Grand Caravan 208Bs, armed with a pair of AGM-114 Hellfire missiles each, have been photographed flying out of Meacham Airport earlier this month. The field officially has no military presence, but it is the home of a major ATK Integrated Systems major modification facility and the armed Cessna Caravan is one of its projects.
The Luftwaffe conducted its first flight-test Oct. 16 of the Lockheed Martin PAC-3 missile, designed to intercept ballistic missiles in the terminal phase of flight. During the test at White Sands Missile Range, N.M., a German Patriot launcher fired a PAC-3 for the first time. The interceptor flew to a point in space where a simulated theater ballistic missile was projected, according to Dan O’Boyle, a public affairs officer for the U.S. Army’s project office. He says the demonstration was a success.
Controllers at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center are calibrating the Hubble Space Telescope’s instruments to begin making observations again Oct. 17, after switching the orbiting observatory’s Science Instrument Control and Data Handling system to its backup “B” side.
Despite the strength of the U.S. defense industrial base, post-Cold War challenges may require a long-term strategy change, according to a new Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) report.
Paradise Hotel San Diego, CA November 13-14, 2008 Highly complex programs of the 21st century A&D industry – are they too hot to handle? Gain real and timely intelligence and perspective about the politics, the money, the technology and the challenges the supply chain must overcome.
COUNTER-IED FACILITY: R4 Incorporated, a defense services company, opened its first domestically located integration facility for counter-Improvised Explosive Device (IED) support and technology at Aberdeen Proving Ground (APG) in Maryland Oct. 15. The new facility allows engineers and technicians to develop, field and support new technologies in counter-IED. Work performed at the facility will include system integration, reverse engineering, form-fit-function, prototyping, vehicle mounts and transit casing as well as complete installations.
The head of the FAA office set up to regulate the commercial spaceflight industry anticipates a rapid rise in paying passengers to space over the next few years. Now the purview of adventurers wealthy enough to pay $20 million-$30 million for a Russian Soyuz ride to the International Space Station (ISS), space tourism will soon expand dramatically as suborbital flights get under way, according to George Nield, FAA associate administrator for commercial space transportation.
EW HELP: Alion Science and Technology will receive up to $8.6 million from the U.S. Air Force to assess shortfalls in future weapons systems and to plan, develop and analyze Air Force electronic warfare (EW) capabilities. Under the Alion-operated Weapon Systems Technology Information Analysis Center, the company and its subcontractors will provide Air Force Materiel Command and the Air Force Electronic Warfare Life Cycle Management Group with system design and related technologies, the company announced Oct. 15.