Defense and Space

Conferences and events for professionals in the aerospace community.
Defense and Space

By Jen DiMascio, Steve Trimble, Guy Norris
The U.S. Air Force, in the midst of modernizing its bomber fleet, launched a competition on May 19 for 608 engines to keep the B-52 Stratofortress in business beyond 2030. Aviation Week editors Jen DiMascio, Steve Trimble and Guy Norris discuss the competition and what's driving the global resurgence in platforms with firepower.
Aircraft & Propulsion

John Dowdy
The defense sector is faring well in the COVID-19 crisis, but gargantuan new levels of government debt signal trouble ahead.
Defense and Space

Aviation Week Network forecasts that over the next ten years, 706 new Western-designed attack helicopters will be built, 588 will be remanufactured
Z

By Steve Trimble
Leidos will design and demonstrate the autonomy platform that will be integrated into and control the U.S. Air Force’s future family of Skyborg unmanned aircraft systems (UAS), the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) has announced.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Steve Trimble
Launch service companies could be given the discretion to decide the optimal launch plan to support the 30 satellites in Tranche 0 of the Space Development Agency’s future military surveillance and communications architecture in low Earth orbit, the agency said May 20.
Space

The U.S. Navy has selected Leonardo’s TH-119 training helicopter despite being underbid by Airbus by $85 million, documents released by the U.S. Government Accountability Office reveal.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Tony Osborne
Leonardo’s Osprey active electronically scanned array flat panel radar is to equip a pair of Beechcraft King Air maritime surveillance aircraft operated for the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA).
Sensors & Electronic Warfare

By Mark Carreau
NASA’s Osiris-Rex asteroid sample return mission team is relaxing previous plans to descend to the surface of its target, called Bennu, to gather surface pebbles and soil for return to Earth, in part due to work constraints imposed by the coronavirus pandemic.
Space

LEONARDO was selected by 2Excel to upgrade two customized King Air aircraft with new Osprey 30 E-scan radars for UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency
Defense and Space

By Tony Osborne
British satellite launcher firm Skyrora has undertaken a full static fire test of its Skylark-L rocket, the first test of this scale since the UK’s Black Arrow program 50 years ago.
Space

By Tony Osborne
LONDON—Four UK space companies have teamed up to form a consortium to secure roles in British government programs as the country looks to grow its presence in space.
Space

By Daniel Urchick
AVIATION WEEK NETWORK forecasts that over the next ten years, 706 new Western-designed attack helicopters will be built, 588 will be remanufactured
AWIN Knowledge Center

Brief news items of interest to aerospace & defense professionals.
Defense and Space

The U.S. Air Force has kicked off a three-way competition to re-engine the entire 76-aircraft B-52 fleet from 2021 to 2035. The request for proposals
Defense and Space

By Steve Trimble
Special Forces looking for low-cost options to support ground troops in remote areas.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Graham Warwick
Four launches will reduce risk for key technologies behind DARPA’s Blackjack autonomous LEO constellation demonstration.
Space

By Steve Trimble
Two of the U.S. Defense Department’s most advanced hypersonic programs have fallen months behind schedule, the head of the Pentagon’s Research and Engineering branch confirmed on May 20.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Steve Trimble
A U.S. Navy request for information for a land-based aircraft to replace the Boeing T-45 may not represent the final requirement when the request for proposals is released, the service’s top acquisition official said on May 20.
Aircraft & Propulsion

TEXTRON AVIATION has US Customs and Border Protection contract to provide two additional King Air 350CER Multi-role Enforcement Aircraft (MEA); SIERRA
Defense and Space

By Irene Klotz
NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley landed at Kennedy Space Center in Florida on May 20 for final preparations ahead of launch next week to test SpaceX’s Crew Dragon system.
Space

By Mark Carreau
NASA has renamed its struggling Wide Field Infrared Space Telescope in honor of the late Nancy Grace Roman, a longtime pioneering woman astronomer sometimes referred to as the “Mother of Hubble.”
Space

By Irene Klotz
Boeing, which was shut out of nearly $1 billion of NASA funding to develop human-class lunar landers, said it does not plan to protest the awards, which went to teams led by Blue Origin, Dynetics and SpaceX.
Space

By Tony Osborne
Spanish defense electronics firm Indra is taking the lead on a European Union program to develop an aircraft-mountable pod equipped with an active electronically scanned array (AESA) for radar, communications, and electronic warfare functionality.
Sensors & Electronic Warfare

By Mark Carreau
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s ninth resupply mission was on course to reach the three-person International Space Station (ISS) early May 25 following a May 20 liftoff from the Tanegashima Space Center.
Space