_Aerospace Daily

Staff
March 2 - 4 -- American Society for Quality Aviation-Space & Defense Division Conference. Radisson at The Port Hotel, Cape Canaveral, Fla. Call (254) 776-3550 or go to www.asdnet.org/cqsdi. March 2 - 4 -- 11th Annual Conference on Quality in the Space and Defense Industries, Radisson at the Port Hotel & Conference Center, Cape Canaveral, Fla. For more information contact Lester Lemay at (254) 776-3550 or email [email protected].

NASA Kennedy Space Center, Fla.

Nick Jonson
Robert Walker, chairman of the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace Industry, told lawmakers Feb. 27 that aeronautics research by India and China has allowed those countries to established "aggressive space programs" that have achieved significant results. "China has moved to launch a manned moon mission in a few short years, and I believe their intentions are nothing but to arrive on the moon and stay there permanently," he said at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Science, Technology and Space.

By Jefferson Morris
NASA is leading a group of government agencies, private sector groups, and universities in a study exploring the potential negative effects of ultra-wideband (UWB) communications on low-power services such as the Global Positioning System (GPS). Developed by Time Domain Corp. of Huntsville, Ala., UWB spreads transmissions across the entire frequency band, sending very low-power radio signals in very short pulses that the company says are dismissed by other systems as noise.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - The Indian government plans to use a single vendor, Israel Aircraft Industries, and a fixed-price policy for all future unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) acquisitions. Defense officials here say this will help the government escape rapid price escalation and get better service support from the company. However, other UAV suppliers, including Lockheed Martin of the U.S., Elbit Systems of Israel and Denel of South Africa, have asked the defense ministry to introduce an open, global tender for acquiring UAVs.

Rich Tuttle
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. - Results of a space wargame now underway here will influence Air Force space acquisition programs, according to Brig. Gen. Douglas M. Fraser, commander of the Space Warfare Center at Schriever Air Force Base.

Stephen Trimble
French defense companies Sagem and Dassault Aviation on Feb. 26 announced the founding of a new joint venture focused on Europe's emerging market for tactical unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The partnership - called Dassault Sagem Tactical UAV - blends Sagem's long experience in short-range reconnaissance UAVs and Dassault's tactical aircraft technology. Details of the finances for the partnership were not disclosed.

Stephen Trimble
Air Force leaders expect a pending review of the C-5A will determine the aging airlifter fleet is too expensive to maintain and should be retired, Air Force Secretary James Roche said April 27. A newly minted inspection team called the Airworthiness Board will conduct the review. Details of the team's structure and role are being worked out now in meetings between Lt. Gen. Michael E. Zettler, deputy chief of staff for installations and logistics, and Gen. Lester L. Lyles, chief of Air Force Materiel Command.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - George Fernandes, the Indian defense minister, plans to fly to Uzbekistan on Feb. 28 to take delivery of the first of six Ilyushin IL-78 mid-air refuelers bought from that country. The aircraft will be presented at a ceremony in the Uzbek capital, Samarkand. An Indian air force crew will fly the IL-78 to India on March 2.

Staff
The scheduled March 14 launch of the Hellas-Sat satellite on an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral, Fla., has been postponed, International Launch Services (ILS) said Feb. 26. Atlas V manufacturer Lockheed Martin has identified an issue with some welds on the aft bulkhead of the Centaur upper stage currently stacked on the booster, according to ILS. The delay will allow time to replace the Centaur with another in the company's final assembly facility in Denver, Colo.

Nick Jonson
The Coast Guard expects to decide soon which maritime patrol aircraft (MPA) it will buy as part of its Deepwater modernization program, a senior Coast Guard official said Feb. 27. The CN-235ER, built by the EADS-CASA division of the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Co., is thought to be the favorite.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. should consider funding technology demonstration projects to preserve the design and development capabilities of the three major prime contractors for fixed-wing military aircraft, the RAND Corp. wrote in a new report.

Staff
DESIGNATION: The U.S. Air Force has designated the Multisensor Command and Control Aircraft (MC2A) as the E-10, according to Feb. 27 announcement by the Electronic Systems Center at Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass. The Air Force considered creating an "M" designation for the aircraft, denoting its multisensor capability, but scrubbed the idea.

Marc Selinger
NASA is studying the possibility of accelerating the development of the Orbital Space Plane (OSP), NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe told a House panel Feb. 27. Agency experts are examining the "permutations" required to speed up the space plane, and their recommendations should be available "in relatively short order," O'Keefe testified before the House Science Committee during a hearing on NASA's fiscal 2004 budget request.

By Jefferson Morris
In a memo sent earlier this week, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld questioned the Air Force's decision to delay the GPS III program, according to Owen Wormser, principal director for spectrum, space, sensors, and command, control, and communications (C3) at the Pentagon.

Nick Jonson
Government customers for satellite services must do a better job of conveying their needs to major providers, a panel of top satellite executives said Feb. 26.

Staff
DEBRIS SEARCH: NASA has used one of its ER-2 high-altitude research aircraft, which are similar to the U.S. Air Force's U-2 reconnaissance planes, to search for debris from the shuttle Columbia, the aerospace agency said Feb. 26. The ER-2 flew a seven-hour mission at 40,000 feet over western Texas on Feb. 22, and researchers are studying the imagery.

Staff
MTHEL TRANSFER: Army Space and Missile Defense Command (SMDC) announced Feb. 26 that it plans to hold a ceremony Feb. 28 to mark the transfer of the Mobile Tactical High Energy Laser (MTHEL) from SMDC's technical center to the Army program executive office for air and missile defense (PEO AMD). The ceremony will take place at Redstone Arsenal in Hunstville, Ala. The transfer is slated to be completed by Oct. 1.

Magnus Bennett
PRAGUE - The Czech ministry of defense has grounded its fleet of 57 L-159 light combat aircraft for at least several weeks following a fatal crash in central Bohemia last week (DAILY, Feb. 24). The ministry said the aircraft, produced by Czech company Aero Vodochody, probably will remain grounded until the completion of an investigation into the incident, in which an experienced air force pilot died. The investigation, which is being carried out by a special commission appointed by the Czech army's chief of staff, is expected to take at least six weeks.

Marc Selinger
Members of the House Armed Services Committee questioned Feb. 26 whether the Navy and Marine Corps have chosen the right mix and size for their aircraft fleets. The two services hope to save $975 million over the next six years by combining their tactical aircraft squadrons and cutting the number of fighter aircraft by 497, or about 10 percent. But committee Chairman Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.) said the reduction may be too deep.

Staff
ABL DELIVERY: The Airborne Laser (ABL) program's beacon illuminator laser, which will help identify the atmosphere's impact on the kill laser, has been delivered to the Missile Defense Agency, Northrop Grumman Corp. said. Northrop Grumman built the beacon illuminator laser and has been developing the chemical laser that will serve as the kill laser. Both lasers will be installed on a Boeing 747-400 Freighter that is slated to attempt the ABL program's first missile intercept in 2004.

Staff
NASA's venerable Pioneer 10 spacecraft, launched in 1972, has sent its last signal to Earth, NASA said Feb. 25. A weak signal was received Jan. 22, with no telemetry data. NASA has no plans to made additional contact attempts, and aerospace agency engineers said the spacecraft's radioisotope power source has decayed and may not have enough power to send additional transmissions to Earth.

Nick Jonson
Actions taken by launch service providers to boost demand for service, such as reducing rates, are unlikely to significantly benefit the satellite industry, according to a panel of satellite executives and analysts. Instead, launch service providers need to focus on launch vehicle reliability and ensuring that their rates remain competitive, they said.