_Aerospace Daily

Rich Tuttle
France's Thales is proposing a homeland security system that a company executive said is broader and more complete than those of its competitors. The system, called SHIELD - for Strategic Homeland Intelligence and Electronic Deterrence - "is a complete and modular offer that combines mutually reinforcing areas, from intelligence gathering and analysis, communications and network security, [and] physical security to command and control and crisis management," said Tim Robinson, senior vice president of Thales' Secure Operations Business Group.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and Brazil's space agency have completed a multimillion-dollar agreement for ISRO to launch Brazilian microsatellites, Indian officials said Nov. 19. Officials from the two agencies began meeting last month to complete the agreement (DAILY, Oct. 23), which will include launching the satellites on India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle.

Nick Jonson
The U.S. Army may not be able to deploy in Iraq sufficient numbers of High Mobility Multi-purpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) with reinforced armor until the summer of 2005, senior Army officials told members of Congress Nov. 19. Several U.S. soldiers serving in Iraq have been killed or injured when their lighter-armored HMMWVs, also known as Humvees, failed to stop small-arms fire. But battle commanders in Iraq prefer Humvees and other light vehicles because their weight and speed is ideally suited for patrolling and similar missions.

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) Versatile Affordable Advanced Turbine Engine (VAATE) initiative is striving to stay ahead of future aircraft turbine engine requirements while keeping costs low.

Rich Tuttle
While tactics may be the best way for helicopters to defeat rocket propelled grenades, at least two small companies are mulling airborne applications of technologies they have developed to protect Humvees and other ground vehicles from attacks by such weapons.

John Terino
PALM SPRINGS, Calif. - The accuracy of newer air-to-air missiles is depleting the U.S. Air Force's stock of QF-4 drone airframes more rapidly than anticipated, and the cost of replacing them with mothballed F-16s may be too prohibitive, according to David Hamilton, the service's deputy director of test and evaluation.

Staff
IN OPERATION: The Flight F16 Defense Meteorological Satellite Program spacecraft has been declared operational and turned over to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, satellite builder Lockheed Martin said Nov. 19. The satellite was launched Oct. 18.

Marc Selinger
The Missile Defense Agency is studying the feasibility of developing an interceptor missile to shoot down long-range ballistic missiles in their terminal phase of flight, an agency official said Nov. 19.

By Jefferson Morris
The Marine Corps' MV-22 Osprey tiltrotor aircraft is about to begin another round of sea trials onboard the USS Bataan, in part to verify that a problem from a previous round of trials has been solved. Sea trials on the USS Iwo Jima last January unearthed a phenomenon known as "roll-on-deck," in which the aircraft "tended to be disturbed while it was on deck with its rotors turning" by the presence of helicopters landing in its vicinity, according to Chief Test Pilot Tom MacDonald. "We've made some software changes and improvements to minimize that."

Staff
A story in the Nov. 13 issue of The DAILY incorrectly identified the teams competing for the Compact Kinetic Energy Missile (CKEM). Teams led by Lockheed Martin Corp. and Miltec Corp. are competing for the work.

Clayton Boyce
Lockheed Martin is touting the power, cabin size and mission systems of its US101 helicopter and a quick ramp-up of its development program in the competition to supply the VXX Presidential Helicopter. "We believe this needs to be a 21st-century helicopter system. This is not just an airframe competition," said Stephen D. Ramsey, vice president and general manager of the US101 project. "This will be the ultimate node on a C4ISR (command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance) network."

Staff
The Senate Nov. 18 approved the fiscal 2004 NASA appropriations bill, sending the legislation to a conference with the House. Among the issues the conference will have to resolve is funding for the International Space Station (ISS). The Senate bill cuts $200 million from the Bush Administration's $1.7 billion request for ISS (DAILY, Sept. 5), while the House bill, which the House approved in July 25, fully funds the request (DAILY, July 16).

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Navy plans to retire a third of its P-3 Orions early because the wear-and-tear on the aging patrol aircraft is turning out to be worse than expected, a service official said Nov. 18. In the past few months, the Navy has discovered "significant fatigue problems" in its P-3 fleet, prompting the service to decide to reduce the number of aircraft from 227 to 150 with the next year or two, said Capt. Steve Eastburg, manager of maritime patrol aircraft at Naval Air Systems Command.

By Jefferson Morris
The U.S. Air Force is moving ahead with plans for a Personnel Recovery Vehicle (PRV) that would replace the HH-60G Pave Hawk for combat search and rescue (CSAR) missions and possibly become the Air Force's common helicopter platform, according to Brig. Gen. John Folkerts, vice commander of Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC).

Staff
U.S. Air Force officials defended new space acquisition rules before the Senate Armed Services Committee's Strategic Forces subcommittee Nov. 18, saying they will improve mission success.

Staff
UFO ARRIVES: The U.S. Navy's UHF Follow-On (UFO) F11 satellite has arrived at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., where it will undergo final launch preparations for its December launch, satellite building Boeing Satellite Systems said Nov. 18.

Staff
A shift of seven military launches from Boeing to Lockheed Martin has added $511.8 million to the cost of the U.S. Defense Department's top 77 weapons systems, the DOD said Nov. 14. In the latest list of changes to the Selected Acquisition Reports (SARs), the Pentagon said the change represented a cost growth of .04 percent to the overall list, and 2.5 percent for the EELV program. The U.S. Air Force shifted the launches to punish the misconduct of some Boeing employees during the EELV competition (DAILY, July 25.

Nick Jonson
Accurately detecting and tracking weapons of mass destruction (WMD) requires technology that can be deployed on the ground rather than from a distance, according to a former Defense Department official. Programs that take an "outside-looking-in" approach, like missile programs, are "just not good enough," said Ashton Carter, former assistant secretary of defense for international security policy.

Brett Davis
NASA is making good progress on a procedure to repair fragile space shuttle heat tiles on orbit, aerospace agency officials said Nov. 18, but work on techniques for repairing reinforced carbon carbon (RCC) tiles on the edge of the shuttle's wing is proceeding more slowly. "Tile repair is going extremely well," Bill Parsons, the space shuttle program manager, said at a news conference. "We believe that we'll have tile repair certification well before we go back to fly."

Nick Jonson
Existing sensor systems are inadequate for tracking dismounted individuals and must be improved if the U.S. military is going to find people like Saddam Hussein, according to William Schneider Jr., chairman of the Defense Science Board. "A lot of our sensor systems that support military operations are designed to find military forces and look for signatures that are associated with the movement of forces and their equipment," Schneider said Nov. 18 at the Defense Research & Engineering Conference & Exposition in Washington.