Terminal 2 at Vietnam's Cam Ranh International Airport (CXR) is actively expanding its international connections through new routes and airline partnerships as foreign travel rebounds.
As we look forward to the Dubai Airshow 2025, let's revisit Aviation Week Network coverage from 2023, highlighting key industry developments and announcements.
Cessna Aircraft had delivered approximately 30 of its single-turboprop Caravan 1s since receiving certification for the utility aircraft in October 1984. Read more in our archived issue of August 26, 1985.
The cover of Aviation Week & Space Technology’s Sept. 1, 1975, issue featured a full-scale model of the proposed Air Force/Boeing Air-Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM) built for integration studies.
The cover of the September 4, 2000, issue shows NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory, which provided significant data during its initial year of operation, complementing astronomical observations in other wavelengths.
This cover is a painting that aims to make the dawn of time visible. Using its sunshade to help keep its infrared detectors near absolute zero, the Next Generation Space Telescope peers back to an era just after the Big Bang.
In this webinar, PwC will explore how aerospace and defense companies are addressing persistent cost overruns and multi-year delays by replacing manual, backward-looking reports with unified, predictive analytics.
During Routes Europe 2025, Routes caught up with The Red Sea International Airport to discuss its regional growth and plans for international expansion.
Sponsored By Messe Frankfurt (Zhuhai) Airshow Co Ltd
AERO Asia – sister show of AERO Friedrichshafen – themed “A New Era: Explore More”, to focus on topics such as autonomy, intelligence, and low-carbon solutions.
On the cover of the September 12, 2005 issue, is an illustration of combined human and robotic operations, space shuttle Discovery STS-114 astronaut Stephen Robinson is maneuvered at 220 mi. altitude on the International Space Station's robotic arm, which was developed in Canada by Macdonald, Dettwiler and Associates Ltd.
In this photo-feature published in the February 22, 1971 issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology, astronaut Alan B. Shepard, Apollo 14 mission commander stands beside the Modularized Equipment Transporter (MET) on lunar surface while he assembles hand tools during first extravehicular activity (EVA-1). Feb. 5.
The cover of the February 22, 1971 issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology showcases the Cessna Citation prototype twin-turbofan is continuing flight testing with FAA certification expected in late summer.
Almost 25 years ago on the cover of Aviation Week & Space Technology’s Aug. 21, 2000, issue featured a U.S. Air Force Reserve Command F-16C from the 419th Fighter Wing at Hill AFB, Utah, maneuvering with a Northrop Grumman/Rafael Litening II targeting pod mounted on the right inlet stores station. Read the accompanying flight report.
Our own Charles E. Schneider reported on advances in aerodynamics, materials, and methods of production expected to spur significant changes in business airplanes in the next 15 years, in the June 22, 1970 issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology.
The cover of the 22 June 1970 issue features the model of Orbiter-Shuttle concept developed at Manned Spacecraft Center is tested at 20-deg. angle of attack at simulated Mach 20 re-entry speed in helium tunnel at Langley Research Center.