Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

By Guy Norris
Cygnus' next mission, which is set to launch in December on a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, represents part of Orbital ATK’s return-to-flight operations following the loss of its Antares rocket on the Orb-3 resupply mission last October.
Defense

By Guy Norris
Lockheed and the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) are preparing to test a modified F-16 flight control computer that will enable older, analog Air National Guard Block 30 F-16s to be upgraded with automatic ground collision avoidance systems.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
LONDON — Airbus Helicopters is urging the Japanese ministry of defense to re-consider its selection of Bell’s Model 412 for its UH-X utility helicopter program. &
Defense

The large amount of collected and stored data on the condition of Boeing F-18s and Lockheed Martin F-35s can make it difficult to properly assess any problems and fix them before the aircraft are needed again, says an engineer working on the problem.
Defense

The U.S. Navy is making cybersecurity an even higher priority.
Defense

U.S. NAVY began second phase of developmental testing (DT II) for

The Pentagon has just released its latest annual report on the performance of

L-3 Communications Vertex Aerospace LLC, Madison, Mississippi, has been awarded a $57,231,214

By Mark Carreau
Representatives from NASA and the agency’s International Space Station partners have agreed to a major update to a five-year-old universal docking system standard intended to nurture increased global and commercial cooperation—including crew rescue.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
The FAA has proposed a $1.9 million civil penalty against SkyPan International for conducting 65 UAS flights between March 2012 and December 2014 in congested airspace over New York and Chicago.

By Michael Bruno
The Pentagon's undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics suggests a “national security consideration” be formally introduced in Washington’s merger & acquisition review processes.
Defense

By Jay Menon
GSAT-6 was “successfully positioned in its orbital slot of 83 degrees east on Oct. 4, after carrying out four drift-arresting maneuvers,” a senior ISRO scientist says.
Defense

While all U.S. military services’ budgets would be affected by an extended budget resolution, the U.S. Navy faces even tougher challenges because of the way its shipbuilding and conversion (SCN) account for vessel programs is set up, defense analysts note.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
The U.S. aviation group charged with developing standards to enable unmanned aircraft to fly in unrestricted aircraft has completed the first documents for key systems, but cautions they are limited in scope and application.
Defense

If the Pentagon overrides U.S.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
Revealing the latest timetable, Avic said the first flight-test aircraft is nearing completion at the Zhuhai, China, base of its general aviation subsidiary Caiga.

By Bradley Perrett
Revealing the latest timetable, Avic said the first flight-test aircraft is nearing completion at the Zhuhai, China, base of its general aviation subsidiary Caiga.

By Graham Warwick
The system integration laboratory for the team’s SB-1 Defiant demonstrator will fire up this year, followed in 2016 by the propulsion system test bed for the rigid coaxial-rotor compound helicopter.
Defense

By Graham Warwick
Darpa’s Towed Airborne Lift of Naval Systems (Talons) program harks back to World War II, when Focke-Achgelis FA-330 rotary-wing kites were towed behind German U-boats.
Defense

By Mark Carreau
The crew of the International Space Station (ISS) initiated the scheduled deployments of 16 CubeSats over three days early Oct. 5.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
Britain will invest in a new fleet of Medium Altitude Long Endurance (MALE) unmanned air systems, Prime Minister David Cameron has announced.
Defense

By Tony Osborne
The Astraea (Autonomous Systems Technology Related Airborne Evaluation & Assessment) program just completed 18 months of work on a virtual certification process, but has no funding in place for its next phase.
Defense

By Jay Menon
Antrix Corporation Ltd., the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), has been ordered by an international tribunal to pay compensation and damages totaling $672 million to Devas Multimedia Pvt. Ltd.
Defense

NORTHROP GRUMMAN has $3.2b U.S. Air Force contract for development, modernization, retrofit, sustainment for all

Lockheed Martin’s space fence program has cleared its U.S. Air Force critical design review, including plans for