Aviation Week & Space Technology

By Jens Flottau
Has increasing difficulty keeping pace with Emirates' growth plans
Air Transport

David Rushton has joined New York-based FlightSafety International as commercial marketing manager-visual simulation systems. He was VP-business development for VDC Display Systems.

Teledyne Brown Engineering will support International Space Station operations at NASA's Johnson Space and Marshall Space Flight centers under a mission operations and integration contract worth as much as $120.1 million over the next five years. The Huntsville, Ala.-based company has agreed to support all phases of flight.

Bill Sweetman
Military intelligence confronts a potential adversary that is secretive and authoritarian, but not for the first time. The media have changed, but like the Soviet Union, China releases what it wants to release. Every large-scale model at the upcoming Idex defense show in Abu Dhabi, every glossy data sheet handed out by a smiling booth attendant (in 2011 at least, the Chinese industry had not switched to memory sticks, because most people aren't that stupid) and the images on the Internet are there for a reason. Promoting exports?
Defense

Azerbaijan launched its first satellite Feb. 7 atop an Ariane 5 ECA rocket from Europe's equatorial spaceport at Kourou, French Guiana. Built by Orbital Sciences Corp. for Azerbaijan satellite operator Azercosmos, the Azerspace/Africasat-1a spacecraft carries 24 C-band transponders and 12 Ku-band transponders to deliver communications coverage to Azerbaijan, Central Asia, Europe and Africa. The satellite was dual-manifested with Spain's Amazonas 3 satellite, built by Space Systems/Loral for Hispasat of Spain.

Elad Kerner has been appointed general counsel of Israeli Aerospace Industries. He has been a legal adviser to Israeli and foreign companies.

By Adrian Schofield
Looking for ways to streamline busy oceanic routes.
Air Transport

Unlike major customer Gulf Air, which hopes to cut its costs by 24% this year as part of a major three-year restructuring plan, Gulf Technics is growing. The MRO in Bahrain recently started offering Airbus and Embraer airframe maintenance services, has plans to build a two-bay widebody hangar at Bahrain International Airport and is evaluating whether to launch component repair capabilities to supplement its spares inventory.

By Tony Osborne
Saudi Arabia is to expand its fleet of F-15 Eagles in the coming years.
Defense

USN Vice Adm. (ret.) P. Stephen Stanley (see photo) has been appointed Falls Church, Va.-based VP of cybersecurity/C4 of Northrop Grumman Corp. He was the principal deputy director of cost assessment and program evaluation in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.

Danny Wilson has been named director of supplier performance and development at Savannah, Ga.-based Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. He was senior manager of supply chain surveillance.

Roy Morgan, founder of Air Methods Corp., has been named the recipient of the Living Legends Vertical Flight Hall of Fame Award, presented by Hurst, Texas-based Bell Helicopter. The award recognizes individuals for contributions to the rotorcraft industry.

Frank Morring, Jr.
Military-space planners unclear whether smaller means cheaper
Space

Mark Carreau (Houston)
Water system success prompts discussion of potential services
Space

Pierre Sparaco
Hop!, Air France's new regional subsidiary scheduled to be established in the next few weeks, is the French legacy carrier's latest attempt to slash direct operating costs on its domestic/short-haul route system, lower fares and thwart discount competitors from acquiring a significantly bigger market share. The initiative confirms the emergence of an increasingly more aggressive strategy but one that is still not aggressive enough. Moreover, Air France is still paying the high price for adapting too late and too slowly to the deregulation of Europe's airline industry.
Air Transport

By Adrian Schofield
The nationwide rollout of a data communication network highlights that Nav Canada has a lead role in the global trend of shifting essential ground-to-air exchanges from voice to text. Nav Canada will this year complete the phased introduction of controller-pilot data link communications (CPDLC) throughout its high-altitude airspace. Nav Canada Chief Technology Officer Sid Koslow says that while CPDLC is hardly a new concept—the industry has been talking about it for at least 20 years—this will be its most extensive deployment for domestic airspace.
Air Transport

Terry M. Ryan has been appointed CEO of Arlington, Va.-based VT Group (VT Services), succeeding David J. Dacquino, who will retire. Ryan was president and chief operating officer of the Emerging Markets Group of ManTech International Corp.

By Adrian Schofield
A satellite-based version of ADS-B is being developed that offers the potential to provide coverage across all Atlantic airspace, which could mean dramatic changes for oceanic ATM procedures. The Aireon system will rely on an Iridium satellite network instead of ground stations, so it can provide coverage beyond the range of terrestrial ADS-B ground stations. It is considered not suitable for busy domestic airspace, but a good solution for less-congested oceanic airspace.
Air Transport

Raymond Hoche-Mong (Montara, Calif. )
I have been an avid reader of Pierre Sparaco's column for years, but he is a bit off the mark when he touts Ryanair as an example of how legacy airlines could improve their financial status (AW&ST Jan. 28, p. 14). Ryanair passengers are being treated like cattle and are “nickled and dimed” for everything. I am waiting for the day when breathing on board appears as a surcharge.

George Duchak has been named director of the Information Directorate at the Rome, N.Y., facility of the Air Force Research Laboratory, succeeding the acting director, Col. David P. Blanks.

This week, Aviation Week publishes two editions. The right cover features Paul Sadler's picture of a contrail-streaked sky above Sydney Kingsford Smith Airport's distinctive tower. Airservices Australia is one of the more progressive air traffic management organizations cited in our ATM special report that begins on page 42. Elsewhere in both editions, we explore Middle East defense trends (page 53), Embraer's regional jet plans (page 36), Etihad Airways' India moves (page 22) and the U.K.'s defense budget (page 27).

A caption in the article “Networking” on page 40 of the Feb. 4 issue incorrectly identified the location of instruction. It was at the Pierce County Skills Center, a Grades K-12 program in Puyallup, Wash.

Graham Warwick
NASA and industry have made substantial progress in minimizing sonic booms by carefully shaping aircraft to control the shockwaves. But a sonic boom is a complex phenomenon, and what works in steady flight might not work so well at other times. Accelerating and turning can cause the shockwaves to focus, creating an amplified superboom. NASA is conducting flight research to determine if a shaped boom can survive the focusing, or if operating techniques must be developed to ensure a superboom never touches down where it can be heard.
Air Transport

David Gee has become VP-engineering at Blackhawk Modifications, Waco, Texas. He has held engineering and leadership roles at Hawker Beechcraft and Raisbeck Engineering. HONORS AND ELECTIONS

Mark Carreau (Houston)
There seems to be little hope of better defining U.S. space policy, given the current underfunded NASA vision of human expeditions to Mars and its ambitions to turn responsibility for low-Earth-orbit transportation over to commercial providers, according to members of an expert panel hosted by Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy.
Space