Aviation Week & Space Technology

Staff
RQuest Product Development Corp. and Arinc are developing a prototype cockpit security system to protect pilots on the flight deck even when one of them has to open the cockpit door.

Staff
Boeing will build parts of the Arrow ballistic missile defense interceptor for Israel under an arrangement with prime contractor Israel Aircraft Industries. The deal put Boeing in charge of about half the missile's components to allow for a faster production rate. IAI will be responsible for integration and final assembly.

WILLIAM B. SCOTT
Integration testing of the U.S. Air Force's new Advanced Targeting Pod is progressing rapidly at Ogden Air Logistics Center, Hill AFB, Utah, in preparation for flight tests this spring. A development version of Lockheed Martin's Sniper pod is being integrated initially with Block 30 and 50 versions of the F-16. Laboratory tests ensure aircraft/pod interfaces are compatible prior to flight testing.

Staff
Keith V. Cressman has become vice president-business development of the CompuDyne Corp., Hanover, Md. He was vice president-government accounts for Nextel.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
Program reviews of the Space-Based Infrared System prompt a warning from the chief of U.S. Space Command, Air Force Gen. Ralph E. Eberhart: Do not trade system capability for cost-savings. As Cincspace, Eberhart has the responsibility to advocate for other warfighting commanders-in-chief, who originally established SBIRS requirements for missile defense and battlefield characterization.

EDITED BY DAVID BOND
Wolf said US Airways doesn't plan to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and believes it won't have to, but some Wall Street analysts think that's where the carrier could wind up. Morgan Stanley analyst Kevin Murphy commented that, historically, airlines that have lost as much money as US Airways have had to file for Chapter 11.

Staff
Thomas L. McNaugher has been appointed a Washington-based vice president of Rand and director of its Arroyo center. He succeeds David Chu, who is now undersecretary of Defense for personnel and readiness. McNaugher was a senior national security analyst.

DOUGLAS BARRIE
Saudi Arabia will likely need to commit to a midlife upgrade of its Tornado strike aircraft within the next 6-9 months if it wants to garner the full benefits of mirroring the British Royal Air Force's Tornado fleet upgrade program, now nearing completion. The RAF is upgrading 142 Tornado aircraft from the GR1 to the GR4 standard, at a cost of 1.2 billion pounds ($1.7 billion). The GR4 upgrade package includes avionics, sensors and weapons systems improvements, intended to help see the Tornado through to the end of its service life, around 2020.

CRAIG COVAULT
New space and communications business will form the ``growth engine'' within Boeing to help the industry giant counter the impact of lagging air transport orders, according to Vice Chairman Harry C. Stonecipher. In a wide-ranging discussion here, he said, ``the decline of commercial airline business caused by the economy and the events of Sept. 11 are going to give Boeing the opportunity to prove to the world that indeed we are a multifaceted company.''

As wrenching as the last four months have been for airlines in North America, a few have proven to be exceptionally adept at making money and growing shareholder value in a harsh economic environment.
Air Transport

MICHAEL A. TAVERNA
Straightforward changes to ignition software and cleaning procedures are expected to allow the Ariane 5, sidelined since a launch failure last summer, to return to operational service on Feb. 28. The Flight 142 failure, which led to the loss of Japan's BSAT-2b telecommunications satellite and compromised the European Space Agency's Artemis technology mission, was attributed to a malfunction in the upper-stage Aestus engine that caused it to shut down prematurely (AW&ST July 23, 2001, p. 38).

EDITED BY PATRICIA J. PARMALEE
Earlier this month, BAE Systems launched an in-house financial advisory group to exploit its defense customers' growing interest in private and partnership program funding arrangements. BAE Systems Capital Ltd. will provide advice and support, both internally and to government customers, on nontraditional finance packages as a route to acquiring defense equipment and services.

Staff
Hainan Airlines is set to expand aggressively into the international market following approval by the Civil Aviation Administration of China for the carrier to fly to Australia, Japan, Singapore and Thailand.

EDITED BY BRUCE D. NORDWALL
PENN STATE RESEARCHERS ARE USING PARALLEL PROCESSING and 4D imaging to visualize aerodynamic flow noise as a step toward reducing the noise and drag from turbulent air flow. They are presenting the simulations on 8 X 8-ft. visual reality projection panels that fully engulf the user. Traditional graphics are inadequate--the 3D structure of turbulence, shock waves and particle simulations has to be looked at in stereographics, they say. The separated flow on helicopters is particularly difficult.

WILLIAM DENNISMICHAEL MECHAM
Singapore's Asian Aerospace is by far the region's most important aerospace exhibition, but it hasn't had an easy time of it recently. Asia was deep in a currency recession four years ago amid concern that political instability could tear the region apart. By 2000, politics had, indeed, grown nasty in some regions, but the Asia-Pacific basin looked like it was climbing out of its prolonged airline recession.

EDITED BY JAMES R. ASKER
The increased precision with which the military can deliver weapons may further reduce the need to ever use nuclear weapons, then again it might not, says Dale Klein, the Pentagon's assistant secretary for nuclear, biological and chemical programs. The greater accuracy of munitions means conventional weapons can be much more consistently effective, making nuclear warheads less attractive, he outlines. On the other hand, he notes that because weapons can be put precisely on a spot, that opens possibilities for a much smaller, tailored nuclear weapon. His conclusion?

Staff
Capt. Peter Laszcz has become commanding officer of Naval Air Depot North Island in San Diego. He succeeds retiring Capt. Emory Chenoweth.

EDITED BY BRUCE A. SMITH
Germany's Bird infrared remote sensing spacecraft has proven its ability to detect and study wildfires that cannot be safely or easily observed from the ground. In trials during the in-orbit commissioning phase on Jan. 4-5, Bird was able to accurately measure temperature range and other parameters of brushfires that broke out in New South Wales, Australia, while determining the propagation characteristics of the firefront, according to German aerospace center DLR, which managed the project. Launched on Oct. 22, the 92-kg.

Staff
Continental Airlines and Amtrak plan to launch the U.S.' first domestic air-rail code-share in mid-March. The airline and the rail line last week announced a partnership that will link the Amtrak stations at Philadelphia, Wilmington, Del., and Stamford and and New Haven, Conn., to airline services at Newark (N.J.) International Airport. Passengers at the airport rail station may board the recently opened AirTrain monorail to connect to airline terminals.

Staff
Eric W. Stallmer, former president of the Space Transportation Assn., has become director of government relations for Analytical Graphics Inc., Malvern, Pa.

Staff
Martyn Lewis has become London-based director of marketing for Tyco Capital Aerospace of New York. He was aircraft trading manager for British Airways.

Staff
Continuing its reshuffle in the wake of acquisitions and the expansion of its U.S. footprint, BAE Systems unveiled a further round of restructuring on Jan. 17. Charles Masefield has been appointed vice chairman. He was the BAE's group marketing director. The company also will have three, rather than two, chief operating officers, with Mark Ronald, president of BAE's U.S. operations, also named a COO.

Staff
James M. Whitehurst has been named senior vice president-finance, treasury and business development of Delta Air Lines. He has been acting head of Delta's Ventures Group and acting treasurer. Chris Duncan has been promoted to vice president-finance/chief risk officer from director of finance, insurance and risk management. Michelle Frymire has been promoted to vice president-finance for marketing and international from assistant controller/managing director for finance.

DAVID A. FULGHUM
The U.S. is subsidizing its airlines and defense industry, according to senior European aerospace industry officials. EADS specifically noted that they want a chance to present Airbus alternatives to Boeing's 767. ``In the aftermath of Sept. 11, the U.S. established a sort of Marshall Plan,'' said Noel Forgeard, Airbus' chief executive. ``The [Pentagon's] decision to procure 100 767s is heavy subsidization of the program.''

EDITED BY FRANCES FIORINO
In response to the threat of international terrorism, Narita Airport and Japan Airlines are conducting a joint evaluation of a biometric identification system. A photo of the passenger is taken at check-in, and the system checks features of the face, such as the distance between facial parts. The photo is affixed to the boarding pass if it matches the one on the passport. JAL also plans to install a camera at the boarding gate to check whether the passenger actually boards the designated flight.