Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Controllers at the Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory are checking out NASA’s nuclear-powered New Horizons probe after a successful

As the U.S. rebalances back to the Asia-Pacific region, the country needs to rethink the way it does its naval business, according to some of the

By Jay Menon
PARIS—European launch consortium Arianespace launched two telecommunications satellites atop an Ariane 5 ECA heavy-lift rocket Dec. 6, delivering the

By Jay Menon
NEW DELHI—Sikorsky has been selected to supply 16 S-70B Seahawk helicopters for the Indian navy’s long-running Multi-Role Helicopter (MRH) requirement

Selected U.S. military contracts for the week of Dec. 1-5, 2014. Selected U.S. military contracts for Dec. 1, 2014 U.S. NAVY Lockheed Martin, Mission

AIRBUS SAFRAN LAUNCHERS is being formed at Issy-les-Moulineaux (near Paris) in 2015 by Airbus Group and Safran to manage existing Ariane 5 program and develop new Ariane 6 space launcher family as required by the European Space Agency. ATK and ORBITAL SCIENCES received clearance from U.S. Department of Justice for their proposed merger. ROCKWELL COLLINS has $26m U.S. Navy contract to upgrade E-2D Advanced Hawkeye Integrated Training System (HITS).

By Mark Carreau
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER/JOHNSON SPACE CENTER — NASA’s new Orion crew capsule flew its first test in space with clocklike precision Friday, using two unmanned orbits that took it deeper into space than any human spacecraft has gone since Apollo 17 before a bull’s-eye splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

President Obama on Dec. 5 named Ashton Carter to become the 25th secretary of defense, taking over from Chuck Hagel. “He’s a reformer who’s never been afraid to cancel old or inefficient weapons programs; he knows the Department of Defense inside and out. All of which means that on day one, he’s going to hit the ground running,” the president said. Hagel resigned Nov. 24, but will stay on until Carter is confirmed.

As events direct greater U.S. attention to Europe and radical Islamic groups in the Middle East, they threaten to erode the focus on U.S. Navy needs in the Asia-Pacific region, says Ronald O’Rourke, a naval expert and analyst for the Congressional Research Service (CRS).

By Tony Osborne
LONDON — Italy has become the latest nation to join the European Air Transport Command (EATC), pooling its military air transport and aerial refueling aircraft with five other European states. Italian air force chiefs signed a note of participation during a ceremony in Rome on Dec. 4, transferring operational control of all four of Italy’s KC-767 aerial refueling tankers, seven C-27J Spartans and all of Italy’s C-130J Hercules to the control of EATC.

By Mark Carreau
HOUSTON – A multinational research team reports evidence of organic material of biological origin within the crevices of a fragment from Tissint, a more than 26-lb. meteorite of Martian origin that was witnessed falling into Morocco on July 18, 2011 and recovered just three months later. The analysis by French, Chinese, German and Japanese researchers raises anew the debate over whether Mars, now cold, dry and with a thin atmosphere rich in CO2, was once suitable for microbial life.

U.S. Transportation Command’s command and control networks have experienced hostile intelligence probes and data theft, and a new cyber monitoring center in the command is giving its leader an unprecedented view of these activities, command chief U.S. Air Force Gen. Paul Selva says. The joint cyber center is a 24/7 operation optimally manned by roughly 40 people from the command as well as from the intelligence and law enforcement communities; roughly two-thirds of the billets are now filled. Its establishment is indicative of how threatened U.S. networks are.

Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 3 USS Fort Worth arrived in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of operations earlier this month, U.S. Navy officials in Japan confirmed, marking a key initial milestone in the ships 16-month rotational deployment in support of the Indo-Asia-Pacific rebalance with different aircraft and additional aerial experience.

The Pentagon needs to get its shipping container management under better control, a recent U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report says. “DOD (Department of Defense) uses DOD or commercial carrier shipping containers to transport supplies worldwide,” GAO notes in its report, “Greater Awareness of Recommendations and Improvements in Data Quality Needed to Resolve Container-Management Challenges,” released earlier this month.

It serves the mutual interests of both Japan and the Republic of Korea to maintain proper defense of the Korean Peninsula, says the regional analyst from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

It serves the mutual interests of both Japan and the Republic of Korea to maintain proper defense of the Korean Peninsula, says the regional analyst from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

By Mark Carreau
NASA and its contractor partners assessed the readiness of the Orion crew exploration vehicle and its Delta IV Heavy launch vehicle late Thursday as

HUGHES-TREITLER, a division of AMETEK, has $9m contract to retrofit Nacelle Cooler Assemblies for V-22 Osprey. CUBIC CORP. has orders worth $51m for

NASA and French aerospace research lab Onera have signed an agreement to study aircraft wing deicing. The 3 1/2-year effort will focus on simulation

Transportation Command chief U.S. Air Force Gen. Paul Selva says he hopes the Air Force procurement system can take advantage of commercially

The Pentagon has lifted flight restraints for the F-35 fleet implemented in the wake of the engine fire that grounded the single-engine, stealthy jet

By Jen DiMascio
The House has passed a bill directing the Pentagon to develop a rocket propulsion system that would replace Russian RD-180 engines by 2019. The

TEL AVIV—Israel Aerospace Industries delivered the 1,000th Ehud Autonomous Air Combat Maneuvering Instrumentation (AACMI) pod to the Italian air force

U.S. Transportation Command is testing a new module designed to safely isolate, treat and transport Ebola patients on U.S. Air Force cargo aircraft

Repairs to the state-owned oceanside launch pad damaged in the Oct. 28 explosion of an Orbital Sciences Corp. Antares launch vehicle will take about