_Aerospace Daily

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.

By Jefferson Morris
Science Applications International Corp. (SAIC) is performing a feasibility study for the U.S. Army on the possibility of developing a combined unmanned aerial vehicle-unmanned ground vehicle (UAV-UGV) system to deliver small but critical payloads to soldiers on the battlefield.

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.

Staff
Lockheed Martin has delivered its first Precision Attack Navigation and Targeting (PANTERA) pod to the Royal Norwegian air force and expects to sell it to other allied nations, the company announced Nov. 18. Norway is the first country outside the U.S. to get the PANTERA, the export version of LM's Sniper Extended Range (XR) pod, and it has ordered eight more for its F-16s. The pod is the world's highest-performance and longest-range targeting system, and its two-level maintenance has significantly lower life-cycle costs, the company said.

Nick Jonson
The cost to build and deliver the U.S. Army's Aerial Common Sensor (ACS) is expected to total around $5.9 billion, according to a senior Army official. The Defense Department is expected to release its cost estimate for the ACS program in January. It is expected to be considerably higher, said Edward Bair, program executive officer for intelligence, electronic warfare and sensors.

Rich Tuttle
The FAA's Joint Planning Office is slated to brief government officials in Washington Nov. 20 on the Access Five plan, which envisions routine operations of unmanned aerial vehicles in the national airspace system in about five years, industry and government officials said Nov. 17. Frasier Jones, an FAA spokesman, said the seminar is closed to the public.

By Jefferson Morris
The Army is considering making Northrop Grumman's Fire Scout unmanned aerial vehicle part of the Hunter Standoff Killer Team (HSKT) advanced concept technology demonstration (ACTD), according to Col. William Gavora, commander of the Army's Aviation Applied Technology Directorate (AATD) at Fort Eustis, Va.

Staff
General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems will continue work on the Common Network Interface under an $11 million contract from the U.S. Navy, the company said Nov. 14. The interface is a software package intended as an upgrade to combat systems aboard several classes of Navy combat ships, the company said. The interface receives inputs from sensors and data links, resolves inconsistencies and outputs the results to display devices and other command and control systems.

Staff
STEREO LAUNCH: NASA has tapped Boeing's Delta Launch Services Inc. to launch the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) mission from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., the aerospace agency said Nov. 14. STEREO is to include two spacecraft that will study interactions between the Earth and sun. The launch is scheduled for Nov. 15, 2005. The launch option is included under the Launch Services Contract that NASA awarded Delta Launch Services in 2000.

Nick Jonson
Loral Space & Communications reported losses in revenue and profit for the third quarter. Net income for the quarter, which ended Sept. 30, fell from a net loss of $57 million a year ago to a net loss of $128 million this year. Third-quarter revenues fell from $211 million a year ago to $47 million. Company officials partially attributed the loss to a reversal of an $83 million sale of the Telstar 18/Apstar V satellite. The sale was converted to a lease arrangement.

Staff
DRS Technologies Inc. has received an $8.5 million contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop and demonstrate new technology to improve day and night infrared sensing of targets, the company announced last week. The contract, plus options, supports the Adaptive Focal Plane Array (AFPA) program establish by DARPA's Microsystems Technology Office (MTO). The Parsippany, N.J., firm will perform the first phase of the program and be eligible for the second and third phases as well, the company said.

Bulbul Singh
NEW DELHI - India will refurbish Vietnam's MiG-21 fleet under a $200 million agreement signed Nov. 17. The deal was completed at a meeting between defense officials from both countries, headed by Ajay Prasad, India's defense minister, and Lt. Gen. Nguyen Huy Hieu, Vietnam's vice defense minister. India's state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd. (HAL) competed for the contract with original aircraft builder RAC MiG of Russia, said senior defense ministry officials here.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Air Force and Navy are looking at the possibility of merging the third and fourth clusters of the Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) program, officials said Nov. 17.

Staff
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the U.S. Air Force have chosen the contractor teams that will compete in the six-month first phase of the Force Application and Launch from the Continental U.S. (FALCON) program.

Staff
ROCKWELL NOTES: Aviation electronics and communications company Rockwell Collins will issue $200 million in long-term debt notes, the company said Nov. 17. The proceeds will go to repay outstanding commercial paper and help finance the acquisition of training and simulation company NLX.

Marc Selinger
The U.S. Air Force has begun looking at the possibility of assigning a "long-dwell asset" the responsibility of tracking friendly forces on the battlefield, a service official said Nov. 17 at a conference on intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR).

Staff
Northrop Grumman Corp. has won a $39.4 million contract extension, plus an option for $40.5 million more, for continuing work on U.S. military early-warning satellites that detect missile and space launches and nuclear detonations, the company announced Nov. 17.

Staff
ISS FUNDING: The Bush Administration is formally objecting to a Senate-proposed cut in NASA's $1.7 billion fiscal 2004 budget request for the International Space Station (ISS). In a statement, the Administration says the $200 million reduction, contained in the FY '04 NASA appropriations bill (DAILY, Sept. 5), "would deplete reserves deemed critical by independent cost estimates and limit the program's ability to address risks in FY '04, including impacts" from the Columbia space shuttle accident.

Staff
COMANCHE TO RETURN: The Army's RAH-66 Comanche helicopter will return to flight testing next April with a newly installed Electro-Optical Sensor System (EOSS), a new helmet and a new target identification and classification system. The EOSS includes a solid-state television, a two-color laser designator/rangefinder and two second-generation infrared sensors. "We're right now poising ourselves for installation of the EOSS," says Chief Contractor Test Pilot Rus Stiles.

By Jefferson Morris
The newly established NASA Engineering and Safety Center (NESC) is reviewing the upcoming return to flight of the X-43A hypersonic demonstrator in response to a request from a member of the project team concerned that current aerodynamic models of the vehicle may not be accurate.

Staff
PRE-EMPTION: The Bush Administration's policy of reserving the right to conduct pre-emptive strikes against potential threats, particularly threats involving terrorism or with chemical, nuclear and biological weapons, is not that different from previous policy, according to NATO Secretary General Lord George Robertson. "Pre-emption has always been part of deterrence policy. That may not have been spelled out, but deterrence had to imply that you might do something if an attack was imminent," Robertson says.

Staff
GRAND CHALLENGE: The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) plans to evaluate and qualify up to 25 robotic ground vehicle teams to participate in its "Grand Challenge" race (DAILY, July 29). DARPA has invited 19 teams to participate in the Qualification, Inspection and Demonstration (QID) event to be held March 8-12, 2004, and expects to invite up to six more next month. The entrants selected range from high school teams to independent engineers and academic groups, according to DARPA.