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DoD/News
Senior Researcher Craig Robin Talks Army Laser Weapon Devt Efforts
by Ramona Adams
Published on January 23, 2018
Senior Researcher Craig Robin Talks Army Laser Weapon Devt Efforts


Senior Researcher Craig Robin Talks Army Laser Weapon Devt EffortsCraig Robin, senior research scientist for directed energy applications at the U.S. Army‘s Space and Missile Defense Command, has said that the command seeks ways to use high energy lasers to disrupt targets such as unmanned aircraft, rockets, artillery and mortar, C4ISRNET reported Monday.

Robin told the publication that there is “an overall effort” to integrate laser technology into the Army’s existing command and control architecture, even though there is no specific program focused on the initiative.

He added that the Army aims to use laser weapons to boost safety in the battlefield and engage targets “at the speed of light.”

Robin noted that a high energy laser could also become a source of intelligence since one of its components can serve as a telescope.

Civilian/News/Space
Report: NASA 2019 Budget Request to Detail Future Crewed Lunar Exploration Missions
by Scott Nicholas
Published on January 23, 2018
Report: NASA 2019 Budget Request to Detail Future Crewed Lunar Exploration Missions


Report: NASA 2019 Budget Request to Detail Future Crewed Lunar Exploration MissionsNASA has said the 2019 budget request slated for release as soon as February will include details on how the space agency will implement a space policy directive involving a potential human return to the moon, Space News reported Friday.

Robert Lightfoot, acting administrator at NASA, suggested commercial and international alliances will help the space agency implement the Space Policy Directive 1 which requires NASA to send humans to the moon for exploration.

The lunar exploration missions will also serve as stepping stones for potential future missions to Mars and other destinations, the report noted.

Lightfoot added the directive will incorporate an approach wherein the space agency transitions from leading the development of space technologies to utilizing industry offerings and collaborating with commercial companies.

Government Technology/News
Jay Clayton: SEC to Monitor Companies Capitalizing on Blockchain Tech
by Ramona Adams
Published on January 23, 2018
Jay Clayton: SEC to Monitor Companies Capitalizing on Blockchain Tech


Jay Clayton: SEC to Monitor Companies Capitalizing on Blockchain TechThe Securities and Exchange Commission will monitor companies that are changing their names and business models to attract investors using block-chain technology, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.

SEC Chairman Jay Clayton said in a speech at a conference in Coronado, California that the agency is “looking closely” at the disclosures of those companies to check whether they comply with securities laws.

Clayton also raised concerns over the “completely unregulated nature” and retail focus of cryptocurrencies and related offerings.

He cited scenarios where lawyers do not counsel clients on the need to comply with securities laws when dealing with initial coin offerings.

“I have instructed the SEC staff to be on high alert for approaches to ICOs that may be contrary to the spirit of our securities laws and the professional obligations of the U.S. securities bar,” Clayton noted.

He added that SEC is working to educate the public on risks associated with unregistered securities investments offered by unregistered promoters.

DoD/News
Air Force Forms Team to Identify Aircrew Physiologic Event Prevention Strategies
by Joanna Crews
Published on January 23, 2018
Air Force Forms Team to Identify Aircrew Physiologic Event Prevention Strategies


Air Force Forms Team to Identify Aircrew Physiologic Event Prevention StrategiesThe U.S. Air Force has assembled a team to investigate “unexplained” physiologic events that some aircrew members have experienced in flights and identify methods to prevent such episodes.

The UPE Integration Team, led by Brig. Gen. Bobbi Jo Doorenbos, will explore ways to increase human performance for tactical aviation missions, the Air Force said Monday.

“As part of the integrated effort to address physiological events, the Air Force is providing more resources to understand UPEs, standardize response actions to such events and assess options for more robust aircrew training to recognize and respond to these events,” Doorenbos said.

Lt. Gen. Chris Nowland, deputy chief of staff for operations at the Air Force, said the service branch intends to share results of the UPE study with other military services and industry partners.

The Air Force trains aircraft operators on physiological symptom recognition and response as part of safe aircraft recovery operations.

The branch noted that physiological events can result health-related factors that affect flight operations such as hypoxia, disorientation, hypocapnia or hypercapnia.

Civilian/News
Federal Agencies to Reopen After Congress OKs 3-Week Stopgap Bill to End Shutdown
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 23, 2018
Federal Agencies to Reopen After Congress OKs 3-Week Stopgap Bill to End Shutdown


Federal Agencies to Reopen After Congress OKs 3-Week Stopgap Bill to End ShutdownThe federal government is set to resume operations Tuesday after Congress cleared a continuing resolution that would fund agencies through Feb. 8 and put an end to a government shutdown that took effect Saturday, The Hill reported Monday.

President Donald Trump signed Monday night the fourth stopgap measure for fiscal 2018 after the House approved the bill by a 266-150 vote and the Senate voted 81-18 in favor of the CR, which includes a six-year extension of the Children’s Health Insurance Program.

Federal agencies shut down Saturday after the Senate voted against the stopgap bill that would keep agencies operational through Feb. 16 at current spending levels.

The deadlock in the Senate ended after Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Kentucky) committed to bring an immigration measure to the floor in February.

Defense News also reported that the three-week funding bill would provide back pay for federal employees and soldiers during the lapse in appropriations.

Hundreds of thousands of employees at the departments of Veterans Affairs and Defense and other civilian workers went into brief furloughs as a result of the three-day shutdown.

The shutdown also stopped the operations of the Armed Forces Network’s television programming for overseas bases, VA call centers, daycare centers on military installations and nonserious medical appointments for troops.

Government Technology/News
NASA-Led Team Tests New Material to Fold Aircraft Wings
by Ramona Adams
Published on January 22, 2018
NASA-Led Team Tests New Material to Fold Aircraft Wings


NASA-Led Team Tests New Material to Fold Aircraft WingsNASA has led a two-day test at the Armstrong Flight Research Center in California on a new material that works to fold aircraft wings while in flight.

The space agency said Friday the demonstration is part of the Spanwise Adaptive Wing project, which seeks to determine if a material called “shape memory alloy” provides the capacity to fold outer sections of aircraft wings and their control surfaces to different angles.

“Folding wings has been done in the past, but we wanted to prove the feasibility of doing this using shape memory alloy technology, which is compact, lightweight and can be positioned in convenient places on the aircraft,” said Othmane Benafan, SAW co-principal investigator.

NASA’s Glenn Research Center developed the alloy and worked with Boeing to use the material with an actuator to conduct research in flight.

Kennesaw, Georgia-based aerospace company Area-I operated its remotely controlled “flying laboratory” dubbed Prototype Technology-Evaluation Research Aircraft fitted with an alloy-actuated, wing-folding mechanism for the flight test series.

NASA noted that the alloy can be installed on subsonic aircraft, including commercial airliners, to achieve optimized controllability and lessen dependency on heavier aircraft components for potentially reduced fuel consumption.

The new technology may also allow future long-winged aircraft to move around airport grounds and help pilots adapt to various flight conditions.

NASA, which also envisions the use of shape memory alloy for supersonic flight, plans to conduct additional SAW flights in the summer in efforts to expand the functionality of the new technology.

Engineers are also working to install the alloy on the wings of an F/A-18 Hornet fighter aircraft, the space agency added.

https://youtu.be/9y1kkG2_QpE

DoD/News
DoD’s National Defense Strategy Aims to Expand Competitive Space Via 3 Lines of Effort
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 22, 2018
DoD’s National Defense Strategy Aims to Expand Competitive Space Via 3 Lines of Effort


DoD’s National Defense Strategy Aims to Expand Competitive Space Via 3 Lines of EffortThe Defense Department has released a national defense strategy that seeks to address the “re-emergence of long-term strategic competition” the U.S. faces with countries such as Russia and China, Defense News reported Friday.

The document details the U.S. military’s three lines of effort as it works to broaden the competitive space and those include the need to increase the lethality of the Joint Force to rebuild military readiness; strengthen alliances; and the need to reform DoD’s business practices.

The report also states the Joint Force’s aim to deter aggression in the Middle East, Europe and the Indo-Pacific regions as well as the Pentagon’s plan to adopt a “rapid, iterative approach to capability development.”

DoD’s National Defense Strategy Aims to Expand Competitive Space Via 3 Lines of Effort

Under the strategy, DoD will work to reduce acquisition risk and address technology obsolescence through realignment of incentives and reporting structures to accelerate capability delivery; expansion of the role of intelligence analysts and warfighters in the procurement process; and use of non-traditional suppliers.

“Prototyping and experimentation should be used prior to defining requirements and commercial off-the-shelf systems,” the document states.

“Platform electronics and software must be designed for routine replacement instead of static configurations that last more than a decade.”

The document came a month after President Donald Trump released a national security strategy that covers homeland defense, border security, military power, economic strength and trade policy.

Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is expected to issue the national military strategy later this year, the report added.

DHS/News
DHS, MIT Researchers Test Crowd Security Threat Detection System
by Joanna Crews
Published on January 22, 2018
DHS, MIT Researchers Test Crowd Security Threat Detection System


DHS, MIT Researchers Test Crowd Security Threat Detection SystemThe Department of Homeland Security‘s science and technology directorate collaborated with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Lincoln Laboratory to evaluate an imaging technology designed to unobtrusively detect potential threat items in a crowd.

MIT Lincoln Laboratory researchers helped facilitate a three-day developmental test and evaluation of a millimeter wave imager prototype at the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority’s emergency training center in Boston, DHS said Wednesday.

Researchers recorded the prototype’s capacity to recognize multiple simulated threat items on a rail platform at various distances as people moved within a radar’s field of view.

S&T intends to review data from the test in an effort to enhance the millimeter wave system being developed through the Surface Transportation Explosive Threat Detection program of the directorate’s explosives division.

The directorate also seeks to integrate the detector prototype with other technologies for layered tests and application in large crowd environments.

DHS noted the millimeter wave imager consists of antennas that are mounted on flat panels and built to process low-power radio signals.

William Moulder, the program lead at MIT Lincoln Laboratory, said his team is developing techniques and algorithms that will work to help security personnel obtain insight from microwave images.

DoD/News
Report: Air Force Implements Zero-Base Budget Review to Boost Military Readiness
by Scott Nicholas
Published on January 22, 2018
Report: Air Force Implements Zero-Base Budget Review to Boost Military Readiness


Report: Air Force Implements Zero-Base Budget Review to Boost Military ReadinessThe U.S. Air Force has started a zero-base budget review program in support of efforts to boost military readiness for the current threat environment.

The service branch said Friday fiscal year 2018’s budget will keep funding for programs such as the B-21 Raider, KC-46 Pegasus, F-35 Lightning II and other military programs to continue the previous year’s focus on readiness.

“We’ll look at each and every program and requirement to see if it’s increasing our lethality for the future threat environment as we prepare for [fiscal year 2020] and the Future Years Defense Plan,” said Matthew Donovan, under secretary of the Air Force.

Donovan also noted the fiscal 2019 President’s budget request aligns with objectives of the National Security Strategy and National Defense Strategy.

The fiscal 2019 request for the Air Force focuses on modernization, nuclear deterrence, people, readiness and space capacities that can help the service branch mitigate challenges in the joint environment.

Government Technology/News
Multiservice Partnership Continues Power System Development Efforts
by Nichols Martin
Published on January 22, 2018
Multiservice Partnership Continues Power System Development Efforts


Multiservice Partnership Continues Power System Development EffortsThe U.S. Army‘s Communications-Electronics Research, Development, and Engineering Center collaborates with the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy and industry partners to explore hybrid power systems for a proposed Future Vertical Lift program.

The multiservice collaboration builds upon previous work on a lithium-ion battery technology that was designed to help power F-22 aircraft, the first Mars Rover and U.S. missile defense systems, the Army said Thursday.

Lithium-ion technology made through the partnership was also applied to the Army Aviation Mission Command’s Tube-Launched Optically-Tracked, Wire-Guided, Improved Target Acquisition System.

“When my AMCOM counterpart called, our industry partner was already looking to build large-scale lithium-ion cells to potentially use in electric vehicles, aircraft and space satellites,” said Ed Plichta, chief scientist for power and energy at CERDEC.

“They had developed a large format 40 amp-per-hour cell for this purpose, and it seemed to be the right size for the power and energy needed to drive the ITAS,” Plichta added.

CERDEC and its partners aim to develop hybrid energy storage systems for potential use in all-electric systems and platforms.

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