Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
The second of NASA's twin Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatories (Stereo) spacecraft has used a gravity assist from the Moon to move into orbit around the Sun, setting up the first 3D images of the Sun as early as April. Stereo "B" flew within 5,468 mi. of the lunar surface Jan. 21 and headed into a heliocentric orbit that will take it behind that of Earth while the "A" spacecraft moves ahead.

James Ott (Cincinnati)
Trash generated by U.S. airlines and airports, equal to a year's waste stream of a large American city, is dumped into landfills or burned in incinerators. About 20% of the wastepaper, aluminum cans, plastic and food is recycled, a percentage lower than the U.S.'s relatively poor recycling rate of 31% of the total amount of waste.

Staff
The Navy is retrofitting its Standoff Land-Attack Missile (SLAM) to operate on a new frequency. The missile was among government systems operating on a portion of the L-band spectrum that was auctioned by the federal government to mobile communications companies. Cost of the project is $110 million, according to the Navy. The change affects SLAM and SLAM-ER.

Edited by David Bond
The Pentagon has endowed the defunct Joint Common Missile, which was mired with fits and starts of support from the Army and Navy, with a new name for its rebirth in the Fiscal 2008 budget. Both services are expected to include procurement funding in their upcoming spending plans for the Joint Air-to-Ground Missile, which will replace a host of existing programs, including air-launched TOW, Hellfire and Maverick missiles. JCM was terminated in the Fiscal 2006 budget request, but supportive Pentagon civilians reviewed the program and moved it forward.

Edited by David Bond
NASA is considering an unmanned reprise of the 1968 Apollo 8 lunar mission to test thermal protection and other systems on the Orion crew exploration vehicle, using an interim "Ares IV" variant of NASA's planned crew launch vehicle.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Northrop Grumman also recently garnered two U.S. Army contracts, the first, via the General Service Administration, to provide an integrated Defense Dept. biometrics solution to integrate the service's global biometrics effort. The company's IT sector will administer program management, systems engineering and support under the $75-million award.

Edited by David Bond
The Air Force's C-130 Avionics Modernization Program (AMP) development, managed by Boeing, is "experiencing significant cost and schedule growth," according to Pentagon budget documents. The Air Force plans to strip $168.4 million from procurement funding, decreasing the number of kits bought, to backfill development. The program has never been far from controversy.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
International Space Station crewmembers are unpacking a fresh Russian Progress cargo capsule, which made an automated rendezvous and docking at the station's Russian-side Pirs docking compartment Jan. 19. Progress 24 delivered more than 2.5 tons of supplies, including 1,720 lb. of propellant for the station's Russian thrusters and 110 lb. of oxygen. The rendezvous antenna on the Progress automatically retracted as planned when the vehicle was within the final 50 meters (164 ft.) of its approach. That didn't happen on Progress 23, which docked Oct. 23 (AW&ST Oct.

By Jens Flottau
Kenya Airways plans to make its home base Nairobi into a major pan-African hub and is preparing to become a member of the SkyTeam alliance.

Capt. Dean Matcheck (Peachtree City, Ga.)
To those clamoring for changing airline pilot retirement age to 65, I say why stop there? If 60 is wrong, so is 65, or 70! Healthy is healthy! No cheating with mandatory age pairings to keep a younger eye on the old-timer, either. When you eventually board a jumbo jet piloted by two of the most senior great-grandfathers at the airline, you will finally have what you're asking for--affirmative action for the aged trumping safety.

Edited by David Hughes
ITT INC. WILL ANALYZE BACKUP SATELLITE NAVIGATION technology for the Joint Planning and Development Office (JPDO) under a contract issued by the Next-Generation Air Transportation System (Ngats) Institute. Ngats is an Aerospace Industries Assn. (AIA)-formed group, backed by the FAA, that was established to help JPDO access the private sector for research tasks. This is the first task request issued by the group which was set up in 2005. The ITT team on this project includes Aerospace Engineering and Research Associates, Qinetiq and Ohio University.

Frances Fiorino (Washington)
The NTSB is determined to reduce the hazards associated with flight into icing conditions--and it is urging safety improvements from pilot training to the design and certification of aircraft. The move is a result of the board's investigation of the Feb.16, 2005, crash of a Cessna Citation 560 (N500AT) near Pueblo (Colo.) Memorial Airport that killed the two pilots and six passengers who were employees of Circuit City Stores.

Staff
A Washington Outlook item on a Congressional Budget Office space radar options study (AW&ST Jan. 8, p. 21) referred to 40 or 100 sq. mi. of ground coverage. Instead, 40 and 100 should have been described as the sizes, in square meters, of radar arrays under consideration.

Staff
Letters 6 Who's Where 8 Industry Outlook 13 Airline Outlook 15 In Orbit 17 News Breaks 18-21 Washington Outlook 23 A European Perspective 50 Inside Avionics 62 Contrails 66 In Review 70 Classified 71 Contact Us 72 Aerospace Calendar 73

Staff
Boeing 737-300F is equipped with an "Advanced Cockpit" from Universal Avionics. The four LCDs (left to right) show a synthetic vision view of the terrain ahead from the pilot's perspective, a terrain awareness warning profile view, a second synthetic vision perspective (from behind the right wing of the plane) and an attitude director indicator with additional data. Many avionics companies are now offering complete flat-panel retrofits for airline and business jets and for general aviation aircraft (see p. 58). ARC Avionics photo by Jay Salazar.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Certain airlines operating out of Los Angeles International Airport will see their fees almost triple now that the City Council has approved the increase initiated by Los Angeles World Airports. (Lawas is a four-airport system owned by the City of Los Angeles.) The move targets carriers operating out of Terminals 1, 3 and 6, including US Airways, Southwest, Frontier and AirTran. The Air Transport Assn. expressed disappointment over the fee hike and questioned the legality of Lawas's action, and said it would seek administrative relief from the U.S. Transportation Dept.

David Hughes (Washington)
As the U.S. follows a deliberate pace in modernizing its air traffic system by 2025, two of the world's largest aerospace companies are joining hands, in part, to encourage faster progress. Boeing has a huge stake in this major endeavor because it wants to sell new commercial aircraft without having congestion and delays crimp sales. Lockheed Martin--supplier of ground-based ATC systems to 12 nations handling 60% of the world's air traffic--has an interest in seeing all this talk about modernizing the U.S. ATC system turned into action.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
And branching out in the security realm, U.K.'s Qinetiq Group will acquire Analex Corp. for approximately $173 million. The Fairfax, Va.-based company provides high-technology professional services principally to U.S. government agencies. The company employs 1,100 at 11 sites in the U.S. The sale should be complete in March, barring any regulatory glitches.

Edited by Frances Fiorino
Meanwhile, Singapore Airlines is in talks with Wipro--India's third-biggest software company--to outsource its reservation call center operations in Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the U.S. Beginning in July, SIA plans to lay off 56 employees in Perth and Sydney, and 84 in Auckland, Los Angeles and Vancouver. In a related move, starting Feb. 9, Qantas and British Airways will close their joint call center in Singapore, with inquiries to be diverted to their centers in Australia and New Delhi, respectively.

Amy Butler (Nas Patuxent River, Md.)
The U.S. Navy will begin deliveries of a modified weapon designed to provide close air support to ground troops in urban areas in Iraq no later than March. Its arrival will coincide with the small escalation in U.S. presence planned by President Bush and as soldiers turn their focus to securing the streets of Baghdad. The BLU-126/B, also called the Low Collateral Damage Bomb (LCDB), was a response to an urgent need from U.S. Central Command.

Edited by Frank Morring, Jr.
Scientists from the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) will get to analyze two different sets of samples from space following the Jan. 22 retrieval by India's navy and coast guard of the Space-capsule Recovery Experiment (SRE-1) from the Bay of Bengal. The 550-kg. (1,213-lb.) spacecraft was launched Jan. 9 on a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) from the Satish Dhawan Space Center on Sriharikota Island in the Bay of Bengal, and returned to a nominal splashdown and recovery about 140 km. (7 mi.) east of the launch site. Following a 10-min.

Staff
Ralph G. D'Ambrosio has been promoted to chief financial officer from vice president-finance/ principal accounting officer of New York-based L-3 Communications. He succeeds Michael T. Strianese, who is now president/CEO.

Rick Roll (Camden-Wyoming, Del.)
Your editorial board bemoans the fact that our representatives in Congress cater to their faithful rather than write blank checks for exploration (AW&ST Jan. 8, p. 58). Good for Congress! You forget that it is our money that Congress spends and, therefore, we should have a strong say as to where it goes. A lot of the pressure to modernize our air traffic control system comes from backers of very light jets, which will be flown by/for a very elite group, not by/for the average taxpayer. Perhaps it is the aerospace industry that is dysfunctional.

Staff
Russia and India were planning late last week to sign a bilateral agreement to jointly expand and modernize Russia's Glonass satellite navigation system. The countries are expected to launch two Glonass satellites using GSLV boosters, and to share development and construction of a new-generation Glonass-K satellite system (AW&ST Sept. 15, 2006, p. 61).

Staff
USAF is fielding similar unmanned aircraft, as the 820th Security Forces Group was selected to deploy the Ground Situational Awareness Toolkit. GSAT includes Boeing's ScanEagle unmanned aircraft and the ShotSpotter gunfire acquisition system that allows identification of enemy positions by tracking the sources of firing using acoustic sensors. The ScanEagle uses its cameras to provide pictures of the identified locations. The 10-ft.-wingspan, 20-hr.-endurance aircraft is launched by a catapult.