Members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization have given the go-ahead to a multinational consortium to prepare for the next step in the development of the alliance's slow-moving effort to field an airborne ground-target-tracking system.
$20M INDECISION: Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, says Capitol Hill's inaction in retiring the USS John F. Kennedy aircraft carrier early, as the Navy wants, costs $20 million every month. Warner, who switched sides and backed the Navy in February, is pushing a legislative change to undo a requirement for 12 flattops that he helped enact last year (DAILY, Feb. 23).
PARIS - The NASA-led A-Train constellation, intended to provide the first tri-dimensional view of the atmosphere, will soon begin receiving complementary data on aerosols and cloud particles following the launch of two new satellites after a series of long delays.
NASA exploration managers hope to develop the first draft of a "living" international strategy for exploring the surface of the moon before the end of the year and present it at an exploration conference in December.
A new National Academies report recommends that NASA develop a long-term work force strategy to ensure it can attract and retain the people it needs to implement the agency's space exploration vision over the next 15 years. "The agency's priority to date has been to focus on short-term issues such as addressing the problem of uncovered capacity (i.e., workers for whom the agency has no current work)," says a new interim report from the National Academies' National Research Council (NRC).
VIEW OF SATURN: A view of the ringed planet Saturn, its horizon and the moons Janus and Dione were captured March 10 by NASA's Cassini spacecraft. A narrow-angle camera and infrared filter were used from a distance of 1.8 million miles. Dione, the larger of the two moons visible, and Janus stalk the edge-on rings with the planet's horizon beyond. Dione measures 700 miles across, while tiny Janus - blurred by its motion during the imaging - is only 113 miles in diameter. Resolution in the image is 11 miles per pixel.
The House Armed Services strategic forces subcommittee voted April 26 to trim recommended spending for the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) by $183.5 million, including cuts in the Kinetic Energy Interceptor and Multiple Kill Vehicle programs.
LCS IN SAN DIEGO: The U.S. Navy formally announced April 27 that the first four Littoral Combat Ships, equally built by Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics teams, will be homeported at Naval Station San Diego. The decision represents the Navy's push into the Pacific over the coming decades (DAILY, Feb. 6). Navy officials had mentioned the probable homeporting before as they look at staffing the two different LCS hull types, which will not allow for crew swapping between designs (DAILY, Jan. 17).
Saying they were "pushing the envelope," members of the House Armed Services projection forces subcommittee on April 27 added $1.3 billion to the Bush administration's $30.7 billion request for fiscal 2007, and further outlined several unrequested - and likely undesired - requirements for the Defense Department's cargo aircraft fleet and naval force structure.
Steve Perkins has been appointed vice president, Washington operations, in the Information Technology sector. Kent Schneider has been appointed vice president, business development, in the IT sector. David Zolet has been appointed sector vice president and president, defense group, in the IT sector.
Chuck Enoch has been named vice president of space systems for the Intelligence and Information Systems unit in Aurora, Colo. Raymond Kolibaba is being replaced by Enoch. Kolibaba retired.
IRANIAN SURVEILLANCE: Iranian nuclear facilities will come under closer Israeli scrutiny now that Israel's new EROS B1 spacecraft has been launched. The satellite was fired into orbit April 25 onboard a Russian Start-1 booster from the Svobodny test center in the Amur region of Siberia. The launcher is a modified version of the Russian Topol ballistic missile. The spacecraft, with an Elbit/ElOp high-resolution imaging system, was developed by the Israel Aircraft Industries/MBT Space Division. It will be operated by Israel's ImageSat Corp.
AIR FRAME WORK: Northrop Grumman's chairman, CEO and president, Ronald D. Sugar, says his company is still a first-tier airframer, with programs such as the Global Hawk unmanned air vehicle, E-2C Hawkeye and FireScout UAV under way. However, airframe work, which constituted about 80 percent of the company's business 10-15 years ago, now accounts for only 12-15 percent. Northrop Grumman "has a very significant set of information and electronic [systems]" efforts today, making it more of a systems integrator than airframer.
The House Armed Services readiness subcommittee on April 27 shifted $856 million within the Bush administration's fiscal 2007 budget request toward the military services' training and operational needs. The readiness authorizers, in their first markup of the FY '07 policy bill, also said they were concerned with the administration's flat spending request once rising fuel prices and inflation are considered.
Finally positioned vertically on its two solid rocket boosters, Lockheed Martin's 154-foot space shuttle external tank for the next mission is now also better positioned for any final modifications before the orbiter Discovery's scheduled attachment by mid-May. Whether such modifications are made will depend on final wind tunnel data on the effect on tank components of airflow changes without the hydrogen protuberance air load ramp, which was removed to eliminate a source of potentially dangerous foam debris.
The F/A-18E/F Super Hornet team is negotiating with the U.S. Navy about funding a number of targeting improvements that will take fuller advantage of the aircraft's new APG-79 radar and reduce engagement times to a minute or less, according to Boeing.
Bob Ferris has been named interim chief executive officer. Ferris is currently president of VirTra Systems. L. Kelly Jones has resigned as board chairman and chief executive officer.
TRANSPONDER TEST: In-orbit testing of an eight-transponder payload on the Spainsat military communications spacecraft has been completed, U.S.-Spanish joint venture XTAR says. The spacecraft was launched on March 11. U.S. and allied government customers will be provided with a global X-band satcom capability by the Spainsat payload, marketed under the name XTAR-LANT, in combination with the venture's own XTAR-EUR satellite, orbited in early 2005.
Robert Hammerle has been named director of business development for homeland security. John Kefaliotis has been appointed director of business development for Federal Aviation Administration and air traffic control programs. Ian Patterson has been named vice president and director of government relations. William Syers has been promoted to vice president and director of congressional relations. Chris Young has been named president and general manager of the space systems division.