The Mississippi Enterprise for Technology's digest of business, science and technology news from NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center, Miss.
Saturday, June 30, 2012
NAVSCIATTS gets new leader
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- Naval Small Craft Instruction and Technical Training School (NAVSCIATTS) held a change of command ceremony June 22. Cmdr. John C. Cowan relieved Cmdr. Bill Mahoney, who is retiring after nearly four years at the schoolhouse. Operating under the Special Operations Command, NAVSCIATTS trains international military students on small craft, operations, communications, weapons, maintenance, instructor development, as well as offering a strategic level course of instruction for mid-to-senior level officers from small maritime units. More than 9,000 students from 89 partner nations have graduated since 1963. (Source: NNS, 06/23/12)
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Engineer gets NASA award
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- The NASA Environmental Management Division presented a 2012 Blue Marble Award for environmental excellence to Stennis Space Center engineer Bryon Maynard today. NASA Environmental Management Director James Leatherwood presented the NASA Environmental Quality Award to Maynard in recognition of his role in converting a 107,000-gallon liquid hydrogen sphere and two other tanks into offshore artificial reefs. Maynard's effort turned the tanks' scheduled demolition into a recycling project that helped to rebuild Mississippi Gulf Coast fish habitats disrupted and destroyed by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. (Source: NASA, 06/28/12)
Airbus coming to Mobile
A news conference will be held Monday in Mobile, Ala., to announce that European aircraft maker Airbus will build an assembly plant for A320neo aircraft in Alabama’s port city. Published reports say the plan calls for an investment of several hundred million dollars to assemble dozens of 150-seat jets each year at Brookley Aeroplex. Airbus president Fabrice Bregier is scheduled to announce the project at a 10 a.m. news conference at the Mobile Convention Center. (Sources: New York Times, Bloomberg via Seattle Times, Mobile Press-Register, 06/27/12) The decision greatly expands an aerospace region that stretches from New Orleans to Northwest Florida. "The entire northern gulf region will benefit from this development, including the Stennis Space Center (Miss.) and New Orleans region," said Charles Beasley, president and CEO of the Mississippi Enterprise for Technology. Airbus parent EADS had planned to build a plant at Brookley to assemble tankers for the Air Force, but Boeing won the contract in February 2011 and is building the planes in Washington state. Mobile officials continued to maintain a close relationship EADS/Airbus after the tanker loss. Mobile is also the home of an Airbus Engineering Center and military aircraft maintenance facility.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
The next Austin?
The two-year-old Gulf Coast Patent Association held its summer meeting at Pensacola Beach, Fla., on Friday to explore "the economic development wheel." The meeting attracted about 30 participants from Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida, including patent attorneys, technology transfer professionals, angel investors and others who discussed bringing innovations to the marketplace. At least one patent attorney said he thinks there's a big future for the Gulf Coast region, pointing out how Austin, Texas, changed over the years into a booming technology center. He and others think the same thing can happen in this region. The Gulf Coast has reseaerch and development activities in a host of fields, including aerospace, marine science, advanced materials and more. The Patent Association was launched at Stennis Space Center, Miss., and has expanded to draw in members from across the Gulf Coast region. (Source: GCAC, 06/23/12) There were several participants at the meeting representing the Mississippi Enterprise for Technology.
Friday, June 22, 2012
SLS core passes review
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -- The core stage of the Space Launch System has passed a major technical review. The core of the heavy-lift launch vehicle will be more than 200 feet tall. Engineers from NASA and Boeing of Huntsville presented a full set of system requirements, design concepts and production approaches to technical reviewers and the independent review board. The core is being designed and developed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville and built at the agency's Michoud Assembly Facility near New Orleans. (Source: PRNewswire, 06/21/12) Stennis Space Center, Miss., is testing engines for the Space Launch System.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Michoud team recognized
NEW ORLEANS -- NASA's Orion Program hosted an employee recognition event for the Michoud Assembly Facility Orion team members to coincide with a milestone. The NASA team has been putting the finishing touches on the first space-bound Orion capsule. They completed the Orion pathfinder weld, essentially a practice operation, in preparation for the final weld. Then the team will do final inspections before preparing the capsule for its move to Florida's Kennedy Space Center at the end of June for final assembly and checkout. NASA's unmanned Exploration Flight Test-1 is scheduled for 2014. The first Orion spacecraft will be launched atop a Delta IV rocket operated by United Launch Alliance. The mission will take Orion to an altitude of more than 3,600 miles, more than 15 times farther away from Earth than the International Space Station. (Source: NASA, 06/20/12) Stennis Space Center, Miss., tests the engines that will be used in the Space Launch System, the rocket that will be used for future Orion missions.
Monday, June 18, 2012
FAA, NASA agree on standards
WASHINGTON -- The Federal Aviation Administration and NASA signed an agreement to coordinate standards for commercial space travel of government and non-government astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit and the International Space Station. The agencies will collaborate to provide a stable framework for the U.S. space industry, avoid conflicting requirements and multiple sets of standards, and advance both public and crew safety. (Source: NASA, 06/18/12) Stennis Space Center, Miss., tests rocket engines for commercial space flight companies.
RR breaks ground on test facility
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- Rolls-Royce today broke ground on a new $50 million jet engine test facility at the company’s outdoor testing site at NASA’s John C. Stennis Space Center in South Mississippi. When fully operational, the facility is expected to create 35 highly-skilled jobs. The Mississippi Development Authority is helping to support construction and workforce training with additional support from Hancock County. It's the company's second outdoor jet engine test facility to be built-from-the-ground-up in the U.S., and will be used to conduct research, development, crosswind, thrust reverse, cyclic and endurance tests on all Rolls-Royce civil aerospace engines. The outdoor test facility opened in October 2007 and is one of only three of its kind in the world. (Source: Rolls-Royce, 06/18/12)
Friday, June 8, 2012
Powerpack test sets record
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- NASA's Stennis Space Center broke its own record Friday when it conducted a test on the new J-2X powerpack that lasted for 1,150 seconds, surpassing the previous record by more than a minute. For NASA the test marked a milestone step in development of a next-generation rocket engine to carry humans deeper into space than ever before. For SSC, the 19-minute, 10-second test represented the longest duration firing ever conducted in the center's A Test Complex. The powerpack is on the top of the J-2X engine and includes the gas generator, oxygen, fuel turbopumps and related ducts and valves. (Source: SSC/NASA, 06/08/12) Previous
Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Infinity crowd watches Venus transit
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- Skywatchers gathered at Infinity Science Center Tuesday for an astronomical event that won't be seen again for 105 years. They took turns looking through two solar telescopes to see the transit of Venus across the face of the sun. The last time the celestial phenomena was visible from Earth was in 2004, but it will not be visible again until 2117. NASA's Infinity is south of Stennis Space Center along Interstate 10. (Source: Sun Herald, 06/05/12)
Sunday, June 3, 2012
More muscle for SSC supercomputer
STENNIS SPACE CENTER, Miss. -- One of the Defense Department's most powerful supercomputer centers will more than triple its computing power this summer when it adds three new supercomputers. The more powerful Navy Department of Defense Supercomputing Resource Center will be operational in the fall, and will put South Mississippi’s supercomputing capabilities back in the world's top 100, according to the deputy/technical director of the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command. The Navy DSRC is one of five DoD supercomputer centers that Navy, Army and Air Force scientists and researchers use to design new aircraft, ships and military equipment; model and simulate weather and oceand conditions; and for a wide range of other DoD missions. (Source: NNS, 06/01/12)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)