Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

By Graham Warwick
Testifying before the House Subcommittee on Aviation Oct. 7, FAA Deputy Administrator Michael Whitaker said the technology will detect radio signals between the UAV and its operator within 5 mi. of an airport.

By Bradley Perrett
The prospects of Indonesia extending its participation in South Korea’s KF-X fighter program have risen, with the defense ministry in Seoul saying negotiations for a further partnership are underway.
Defense

By Mark Carreau
A network of Martian lakes and stream deltas, estimated at well over three billion years old, once dominated the floor of the nearly 90-mi.-wide Gale Crater, according to findings from researchers associated with NASA’s Curiosity Rover.
Defense

“We are working together bilaterally with Spain, in a partnership that gives us greater ability to react swiftly and effectively to a crisis,” Carter says.

CAE has $76m U.S. Navy and U.S. Air Force contracts for training services and simulation products

As part of continuing upgrades to the Russian air and space forces, Sukhoi delivered

U.S. space exploration planners say the next big piece of human hardware needed on the road to Mars is a modular habitat that could be stationed near the Moon and visited by early manned Orion capsule missions.
Space

By Tony Osborne
The British government has outlined plans to accelerate the widespread use of unmanned aerial vehicles, and potentially to open non-segregated airspace for use by such systems by the end of the decade.

By Guy Norris
SpaceX says the upper-stage strut first identified as the prime suspect has been officially confirmed as the root cause of the June 28 mishap.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
Defense officials say most of the additional requested funding is related to the country’s acquisition of the F-35.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
LONDON—The U.K.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
South Korea is moving toward buying 12 Lockheed Martin S-3 Vikings, ex-U.S. Navy aircraft that would form a second-tier force to boost the country’s anti-submarine capability.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
Small special-operations teams that want to leave no trace are key customers for the system, as are disaster-relief teams in need of delivery vehicles that do not require unpacking and transporting.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
Britain will purchase an upgraded derivative of General Atomics’ MQ-9 Reaper medium-altitude, long-endurance unmanned aircraft to meet its newly re-named Protector program requirements.
Defense

Selex believes the airship could be a low-cost complement to a small U.K. fleet of high-end antisubmarine warfare aircraft.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
Lockheed Martin is looking ahead to U.S. Air Force and Navy directed-energy weapons requirements as it begins manufacture of a 60-kW electric-fiber-laser system for a U.S. Army demonstration.
Defense

Despite carriers' continued utility, the U.S. Navy needs to revisit the way it develops and uses the nuclear-powered vessels and the convoys that protect them, the Hudson Institute says.
Defense

EUROPEAN SPACE AGENCY and EUMETSTAT agreed to jointly develop

Norway’s defense chief continues to publicly back the country’s 52-aircraft F-35 buy

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By Guy Norris
Sierra Nevada Space Systems will deliver its Dream Chaser engineering test article to NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center in California around year’s end and plans to resume atmospheric drop testing in the first quarter of 2016.
Space

By Graham Warwick
The central theme of the hearing of the House Transportation and Infrastructure’s aviation subcommittee was the rapid rise in pilot reports of UAV sightings, particularly within airspace around airports.

Operational use of the Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program spacecraft marks a major expansion in the U.S. Air Force’s ability to spy on other satellites in orbit.
Defense

By Guy Norris
The launch site’s application will be submitted by the end of the month.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
Wide-area motion imagery (WAMI) is to be used for airborne security at the 2016 Summer Olympic Games in Rio de Janiero, in what could be the first international use of technology first fielded by the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Defense