Aviation Week & Space Technology

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Lockheed Martin Annual Sales: $42.7 billion Rank: 1st (Revenue greater than $20 billion) Average Five-Year Score Improvement: 5th (up 6%)

With the help of NASA’s Aqua satellite, researchers have performed the first global analysis of the health of ocean plants. Using Aqua’s Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (Modis), scientists observed the fluorescent red light emitted by phytoplankton in the open ocean and assessed how efficiently the microscopic plants are converting sunlight and nutrients into food, using photosynthesis. The team’s full findings appear in the May edition of the journal Biogeosciences.

FlyDubai, the low-fare Dubai-based startup, received its air operators certificate from the local General Civil Aviation Authority late last month, clearing the way for service to start June 1. The first flight will be between Dubai and Beirut. The network will quickly expand to include Damascus, Amman, and Alexandria, Egypt. FlyDubai, a sister of Emirates, will operate Boeing 737-800s and plans a fleet of 50 aircraft.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Textron Defense Systems’ Sensor Fuzed Weapon (SFW) smart munition system has completed flight tests at Eglin AFB, Fla., the last step to full qualification for the production units assembled at the new plant in Oklahoma; the new line is now fully qualified.

Scott Thompson (Tysons Corner, Va.), James W. Thomas (Tysons Corner, Va.)
Last year set new records for A&D industry revenues and profits. However, 2008 was marked by two distinct periods: strong profitability was achieved in the first three quarters, while the fourth quarter was shadowed by a gathering storm of the intensifying global financial crisis and a crippling strike at Boeing. Although new profit records were set, aggregate Top-Performing Companies scores decreased modestly in 2008 overall, indicating the peak of the current cycle may have occurred during the third quarter. The decrease is attributable primarily to two factors.

Sal Picataggio (Bay Shore, N.Y.)
Before the U.S. Air Force officially chooses a C-27 variant as its next gunship, why not consider the Basler BT-67? A cost analysis between the two might yield some surprises. The airframe is rebuilt, turboprops are installed, and Basler gunships are already in service. It could be called the “Super Puff” after the original AC-47 Puff the Magic Dragon.

2009 FIVE-YEAR MOST IMPROVEDREVENUE BETWEEN $250 MILLION-$1 BILLION AVERAGE SCORE TOTAL 5-YEAR SCORE Rank COMPANY DATE SCORE IMPROVEMENT 1 GenCorp Inc. Nov.

Harry Hohmeister has been appointed CEO and Holger Hatty chief commercial officer of Swiss International Air Lines . Hohmeister was a member of the board of directors of affiliate Lufthansa Passenger Airlines. Hatty was head of strategy, alliances and holdings, network management, information technology and purchasing for Lufthansa Passenger Transportation. Peter Gerber has been named to Lufthansa Cargo’s executive board to be labor director and head of finance and human resources. He has been senior vice president-corporate industrial relations and social security.

Robert Wall (Paris)
The French government wants Europe to start building momentum for the development of the next-generation heavy-lift rocket to replace the Ariane 5 so the new system can be fielded before 2025.

Edited by Patricia J. Parmalee
Raytheon and the University of Texas at Austin’s Center for Information Assurance and Security (CIAS) will partner on research for new and improved cybersecurity approaches. Raytheon will fund the 10-year effort that involves 21 CIAS faculty working on computer security and information assurance projects, addressing such issues as password breaches and intrusion detection. Along with funding, the company will bring its more than 30 years’ experience in this field to the table.

By Joe Anselmo
Annual Sales: $42.7 billion Rank: 1st (Revenue greater than $20 billion) Average Five-Year Score Improvement: 5th (up 6%)

By Joe Anselmo
Annual Sales: $33.9 billion Rank: 9th (Revenue greater than $20 billion) Average Five-Year Score Improvement: 9th (down 1%)

Martin F. Giesbrecht (Hebron, Ky.)
Reader Daniel R. Schaefer declares himself “disgusted” with your recent cap-and-trade editorials (AW&ST May 11, p. 11).

It appears affordability has become the key driver for the Obama administration when it comes to defense spending, and additional program cuts may be likely during the quadrennial review, notes James McAleese of McAleese & Associates. The 2010 Pentagon budget request and supplemental “Overseas Contingency Operations” request favors the Navy, while flat-lining the Army and Air Force, the analyst and Pentagon consultant points out.

L-3 Communications says it will appeal a federal jury’s decision to award Lockheed Martin $37.3 million in an intellectual property dispute over data relating to the P-3 Orion anti-submarine warfare aircraft. Lockheed won the verdict in U.S. District Court in Atlanta May 21. The jury decided Lockheed is due $30 million for L-3’s misuse of trade secrets and $7.28 million for breaching nondisclosure agreements related to its work on the maritime patrol aircraft.

Graham Warwick (Washington)
With international standards soon to be published for radio-frequency identification of parts on aircraft, airlines are coming to grips with how to use the new technology that both Airbus and Boeing are planning to deploy on their latest widebodies. A working group has been set up to take the available standards and develop specific real-usage cases, from the perspective of airlines and maintenance providers, in order to develop guidelines for introducing RFID technology into service.

June 8-9Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lean Advancement Initiatives “Architecting Future Enterprises.” Also, July 13-15—LAI Lean Academy Short Course. Both in Cambridge. Call +1 (617) 258-7628 or see http://lean.mit.edu June 15-19Simtech 2009: “Simulation, Concepts, Capability and Technology.” Adelaide (Australia) Convention Center. See www.siaa.asn.au/simtect/2009/2009.htm June 15-21—Paris air show. Le Bourget. See www.paris-air-show.com

June 10—Webinar: Capitalizing on Raw Material Aggregation. July 16—Demonstrating the Value of Corporate Aircraft Management Forum. New York. Aug. 5-6—Required Navigation Performance Management Forum. Dallas. Aug. 12-13—Program Risk Management Forum. Washington. Sept. 22—Green Europe. Hamburg, Germany. Sept. 22-24—MRO Europe Conference & Exhibition. Hamburg. Oct. 6-7—Human Capital and Talent Acquisition/Labor Management Forum. Chicago.

Meanwhile, a $38-million contract to build weapons that can fry electronics and attack computer memories as part of a cyberattack has been awarded to Boeing Phantom Works. The company is to develop and test—on the ground and in the air—a nonlethal, high-power microwave (HPM) airborne demonstrator weapon for the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory’s counter-electronics high-power microwave advanced missile project (Champ). The three-year Champ project is to be the first demonstration of an HPM counter-electronic aerial weapon.

Amy Butler (Washington)
The U.S. Air Force says it has high confidence the first new Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite will launch as planned in late 2014, mitigating the possibility of a gap in timing and navigation data for users worldwide.

Edited by John M. Doyle
When the nation’s war colleges plan table-top war game exercises, they usually pick China as the adversary, and former Navy Secretary John Lehman says that could become a self-fulfilling prophecy. He notes that in the 1920s and ’30s, military planners developed and constantly upgraded War Plan Orange against Japan—to the point where they “viewed Japan as, inevitably, a major threat.” Japan knew about Orange and planned its own U.S. war strategy.

The first phase of tests of the rocket motor for Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo (SS2) space tourism venture have been successfully completed by Mojave, Calif.-based Scaled Composites and its subcontractor Sierra Nevada (SNC). Virgin says the hybrid nitrous oxide system is the largest of its kind and will power SS2 into suborbital space at more than 2,500 mph. and to over 65 mi. above the Earth’s surface. The rocket team is working under a multi-year contract that calls for development, testing and fielding of a production-ready hybrid rocket motor.

By Joe Anselmo
BOEING Annual Sales: $60.9 billion Rank: 6th (Revenues greater than $20 billion) Average Five-Year Score Improvement: 2nd (up 10%)

Delta Air Lines has backtracked on part of its announced $50 fee for most economy-class customers who check a second bag on international flights, narrowing its application to U.S.-Europe flights only. A Delta spokesman said May 28 that the airline changed the scope of the fee, effective for bookings on or after May 23 for flights as of July 1, because “we constantly monitor the industry landscape to ensure our fares and fees are competitive.” No other carriers have matched the fee, which may not apply to code-share passengers.

Kevin J. Riley, who is president/general manager of Teledyne Scientific and Imaging, Thousand Oaks, Calif., has won the Henry Levinstein Award from the Military Sensing Symposia Detector Specialty Group , for his “technical and management contributions in the development of focal plane arrays for the military sensing community and national defense.” Levinstein was a professor at Syracuse (N.Y.) University and pioneer in the field of semiconductor physics relating to infrared detectors.