Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Madhu Unnikrishnan
This year will be marked by mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in the aerospace and defense industries, as companies look back on a year in which they paid down debt and stockpiled cash, a new report from consultancy Deloitte states. After hitting a low in 2009, M&A rose by 192% in 2010 and are expected to grow even further this year. A&D companies have paid down debt over the last five years, and Deloitte estimates that cash balances among the A&D companies it tracks weigh in around $70 billion.

Staff
NAVY CAE USA, Inc., Tampa, Fla., is being awarded a $43,543,031 firm-fixed-price contract to design, fabricate, install and test one MH-60R Tactical Operational Flight Trainer and one MH-60R/S Tactical Operational Flight Trainer. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was not competitively procured pursuant to Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation 6.302-1. The Naval Air Warfare Center, Training Systems Division, Orlando, Fla., is the contracting activity. (N61340-11-C-0006) ARMY

Paul McLeary
Evaluators at the 53rd Wing of Air Combat Command at Eglin AFB, Fla., recommended that the U.S. Air Force’s Gorgon Stare wide-area surveillance system not be fielded after a series of tests last year, according to a memo leaked Jan. 24. For some time the U.S. Air Force has been talking up Gorgon Stare, its brand-new airborne collection system that comprise nine cameras in a pod that can be attached to the belly of a Reaper UAV. Word has been that the system was about to be deployed to Afghanistan.

Kazuki Shiibashi
TOKYO — Japan’s second unmanned H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV-2), launched from the Tanegashima Space Center on Jan. 22., is due to dock with the International Space Station on Jan. 28 at 4:00 a.m., Japan time, to deliver supplies and instruments.

Staff
VIRTUAL SPACE: Lockheed Martin is opening a new virtual reality lab, known as the Collaborative Human Immersive Laboratory (CHIL), which the company says will aid in space system development. To be located in Littleton, Colo., the CHIL will allow engineers and technicians to test products and processes virtually before physically creating them. Programs expected to use the CHIL include GPS III and NASA’s Orion spacecraft.

U.S. Navy
Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Tests Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense Tests Test Date Target Type Range Aegis Ship Hit Miss January 2002 TTV – Unitary (SCUD) 300-500km Lake Erie X

By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — With the space shuttle program shutting down this year, NASA on Jan. 24 issued official notification that Kennedy Space Center (KSC) launch pads, payload processing facilities, runways and other amenities will be available for use by commercial companies and non-federal entities.

Michael Fabey
SEAHAWK SUPPORT: The U.S. Navy has awarded the Maritime Helicopter Support Co. a $1.4 billion firm fixed-price contract to continue providing performance-based logistics support for more than 490H-60 Seahawk helicopters. Maritime Helicopter Support—a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Sikorsky Aircraft—will manage the supply chain and provide as-needed repair of more than 1,250 aircraft components and subsystems for the Navy’s H-60 Tip-to-Tail performance-based logistics program.

Michael Bruno
U.S. nuclear weapon workers reached a milestone in disarmament capabilities recently with the dismantlement of the first secondary warhead from a retired B83, one of the biggest bomb systems ever built. Moreover, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announced Jan. 20 that its Y-12 National Security Complex in Oak Ridge, Tenn., will be taking apart some of the same units that were built there during the Cold War.

Graham Warwick
LASER MILESTONE: Claiming a breakthrough in development of the free electron laser (FEL), the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR) says Los Alamos National Laboratory has demonstrated an injector capable of generating the electrons needed to produce a megawatt-class beam weapon. The FEL works by passing a beam of electrons at near-light speed through increasingly strong magnetic fields to produce a laser beam. Crucially for naval applications, the FEL can be tuned to different wavelengths for different missions and threats.

Michael A. Taverna
Paris — New French Defense Minister Alain Juppe says implementing a new defense cooperation treaty with the U.K., without negatively impacting other alliances, will be one of his top objectives. In his first major address since taking over from Herve Morin two months ago, Juppe told a military gathering here Jan. 18 that he will give top priority this year to putting the treaty, signed on Nov. 2, into application.

Staff
SECONDARY PAYLOADS: Operators with small spacecraft will have a one-stop place to shop for launch services under a teaming arrangement by two specialists organizing piggyback rides on U.S. and other launch vehicles.

Staff
AFGHAN HUMMINGBIRDS: The U.S. Army plans to deploy three Boeing YMQ-18A (A160T Hummingbird) long-endurance unmanned helicopters to Afghanistan as a quick-reaction capability (QRC). A U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency A160T will have the BAE Systems Argus-IS gigapixel wide-area surveillance sensor and a signals-intelligence package and be deployed this year. Two aircraft provided by U.S. Special Operations Command will follow in Fiscal 2012.

Staff
CANADIAN CONSTELLATION: A Canadian startup known as Microsat intends to build and deploy a microsatellite-based system to provide Internet backhaul to operators and service providers around the globe. Apparently intended to compete with O3b, a 20-satellite network due to enter operation in 2013, the system would consist of 78 satellites that could be launched aboard six rockets. Financing of the project, known as CommStellation, was not divulged.

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) JAN. 25 — Aviation Week Advantage: Forecast 2011 Webinar Series: Commercial Programs Update — Major Aircraft Through Regional Jets, Time: 12:00 Noon - 1:00 p.m. EST. For more information call Keith Gregory at 1-212-904-4166 or go to www.aviationweek.com/forecast2011

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Spacewalking cosmonauts Dmitry Kondratyev and Oleg Skripochka spent five hours outside the Russian segment of the International Space Station on Jan. 21 installing communications equipment and retrieving science experiments. The cosmonauts encountered few difficulties as they worked nearly an hour ahead of schedule. Kondratyev, however, was unable to activate the bio-medical monitoring system in his spacesuit.

Michael Mecham
SAN FRANCISCO — A United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy lifted a bus-sized classified satellite for the National Reconnaissance Office into orbit from Space Launch Complex-6 (SLC-6) at Vandenberg AFB, Calif., at 1:10 PST Jan. 20 — the largest rocket ever launched from the West Coast.

Robert Wall
As safety personnel try to figure out why the boom on an Airbus Military KC-30A broke during a refueling with a Portuguese F-16, they may be aided by the fact the incident involved a developmental aircraft.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Russia’s Electro-L geostationary weather satellite has reached its initial targeted orbit, reportedly at 76 deg. E. Longitude, and started normal checkout operations. The first domestic geostationary weather satellite launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome since the Geostationary Operational Meteorological Satellite (GOMS-1) on a Proton in 1994, Electro-L flew on a Zenit 2SB with a Fregat-SB upper stage. Launch came at 7:29 a.m. EST Jan. 20, and the spacecraft separated at 4:28 p.m. EST.

Staff
SATELLITE SETBACK: ViaSat has rescheduled the launch of its high-throughput Ka-band broadband satellite, ViaSat-1, to the summer, instead of in the first quarter of this year as previously planned. The delay was attributed to the need for additional tests and repairs after the spacecraft was damaged during testing. ViaSat says full costs for the postponement will be assumed by the manufacturer, Space Systems/Loral.

Michael Bruno
A Boeing company has lost its bid protest against a FLIR Systems company over a force protection system bought quickly by the U.S. Marine Corps under the Obama administration’s military surge in Afghanistan last year.

Staff
PUMMELLED POSEIDON: Boeing says flight testing of the P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol aircraft will continue expanding toward coverage of the full envelope, following the completion of full-scale static testing of the 737-based airframe on Jan. 7. The series of tests, which began in May 2009, put static vehicle S1 through 154 different conditions in which it sustained loads equal to or greater than those expected during operational flight.

Michael Fabey
In an effort to clean ship hulls of bugs, slime and other unwanted material, the Office of Naval Research (ONR) is developing the Hull BUG, an unmanned underwater vehicle designed to conduct anti-fouling missions and “groom” about 80% of a ship’s hull.