Defense

By Brian Everstine
A House Armed Services subcommittee, in a markup to the 2023 defense policy bill approved June 9, is raising concerns over multiple Pentagon helicopter programs and urging the Defense Department to move forward on other efforts it is trying to slow.
Budget, Policy & Operations

By Brian Everstine
Five U.S. Marines were killed June 8 when a Bell Boeing MV-22B crashed in California, the second fatal accident involving the tiltrotor within three months.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Michael Bruno
Mangata Networks, a satellite-based connectivity, plans to showcase its initial network in early 2023, potentially launch eight highly elliptical-orbit satellites that year and then inaugurate service in 2024 for the Northern Hemisphere.
Connected Aerospace

By Michael Bruno
Shield AI, an artificial intelligence startup targeting the aerospace and defense market, announced on June 9 it had garnered $90 million in private-equity issuance and $75 million in new debt as part of a Series E fund-raising round.
Emerging Technologies

By Brian Everstine
An interim update Boeing designed to improve the KC-46 Pegasus’ remote-vision system has been stalled due to an ongoing software problem in the initial two aircraft to receive the installation.
Multi-Mission Aircraft

By Steve Trimble
Northrop Grumman and L3Harris have been selected to form a three-way competition with previously announced Lockheed Martin for a contract to develop the Stand-in Attack Weapon for the U.S. Air Force.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Jens Flottau
Embraer believes it has identified the right strategy to emerge from the crisis and build a broader industrial portfolio.
Air Transport

By Mark Carreau
Even without test pilot astronauts on board, NASA’s Artemis I mission of a Space Launch System (SLS)-propelled Orion capsule around the Moon and back to Earth promises drama, which the space agency is working to share publicly through live video and data transmissions.
Space

By Brian Everstine
A lack of available aircraft and range time has delayed the testing of the GBU-53/B StormBreaker small-diameter bomb, with initial operational capability expected to slip, according to a new government assessment.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Michael Bruno
Canada’s first private-equity fund dedicated to the aerospace supply chain is targeting $100 million and already has garnered commitments for $77 million, officials said.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Garrett Reim
SEAKR Engineering recently demonstrated optical communications between a pair of two DARPA Mandrake II satellites.
Space

By Brian Everstine
The U.S. Space Force is at risk of fielding a new Deep Space Advanced Radar Capability that does not meet requirements and could necessitate costly and time-intensive rework because it is moving ahead without a formal risk assessment and baseline for the design, according to a new assessment.
Space

Aviation Week Staff
Russian State Space Corp. Roscosmos CEO Dmitry Rogozin threatened to restart a German telescope aboard the joint Russian-German Spektr-RG space observatory which Germany shut down in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Space

By Brian Everstine
The U.S. Air Force now expects to make a production decision on the MH-139 Grey Wolf helicopter in January 2023, a total slip of about 16 months.
Aircraft & Propulsion

RSA ENGINEERED PRODUCTS (TriMas) has Boeing contract to supply fluid conveyance components for T-7A Red Hawk.
Defense

DRAKEN EUROPE is building new 5,000 sq ft hangar at Teesside Airport, UK, where it currently maintains five specially modified Dassault Falcon jets
Defense

By Thierry Dubois
While the Future Combat Air System program is still stalled because of a disagreement between Airbus and Dassault Aviation, the French procurement agency and Dassault are hinting they have ideas for a Plan B.
Aircraft & Propulsion

By Brian Everstine
The invasion of Ukraine has highlighted the need for missile defense in a conflict, and a House panel is calling on the U.S. Army to assess if it needs more batteries for the mission and how its Patriot systems should be upgraded.
Missile Defense & Weapons

By Garrett Reim
NASA is eyeing the DiskSat as a follow-up to the cubesat.
Space

By Brian Everstine
With the U.S. Space Force expected to increase the number of launches—especially with the Space Development Agency gearing up to launch its Tranche 1 and 2 programs—a House panel is calling for the service to increase the use of a common launch integrator to drive down costs.
Space

By Mark Carreau, Irene Klotz
The agency turns to public-private partnerships to equip Artemis spacewalkers.
Space

By Graham Warwick
Three different alternative navigation technologies have been flight tested in a regional jet and helicopter.
Emerging Technologies

By Garrett Reim
MDA and Redwire have received contracts to each develop 42 antennas for low Earth orbit military satellites.
Space

By Mark Carreau
If the threat of severe thunderstorms materializes over Eastern New Mexico and the Texas Panhandle on June 8, the staff of a NASA project and its heavily instrumented high-altitude ER-2 jet aircraft plan to be there.
Multi-Mission Aircraft

H. Edward "Ed" Paul, III to Vice President and Controller of Lockheed Martin, Bethesda, MD.
Defense