Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 7:31 a.m. No.20904177   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day

May 23, 2024

 

Unraveling NGC 3169

 

Spiral galaxy NGC 3169 looks to be unraveling like a ball of cosmic yarn. It lies some 70 million light-years away, south of bright star Regulus toward the faint constellation Sextans. Wound up spiral arms are pulled out into sweeping tidal tails as NGC 3169 (left) and neighboring NGC 3166 interact gravitationally. Eventually the galaxies will merge into one, a common fate even for bright galaxies in the local universe. Drawn out stellar arcs and plumes are clear indications of the ongoing gravitational interactions across the deep and colorful galaxy group photo. The telescopic frame spans about 20 arc minutes or about 400,000 light-years at the group's estimated distance, and includes smaller, bluish NGC 3165 to the right. NGC 3169 is also known to shine across the spectrum from radio to X-rays, harboring an active galactic nucleus that is the site of a supermassive black hole.

 

https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html?

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 7:50 a.m. No.20904246   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The Marshall Star for May 22, 2024

 

CONTENTS

Making Connections: Marshall Hosts Annual Jamboree, Poster Expo

Rae Ann Meyer Selected as Marshall’s Deputy Director

Julie Bilbrey Named Director of OSAC at Marshall; Jeramie Broadway Named Deputy Director

Marshall, Michoud Leadership Join Industry at State Capitol for Louisiana Space Day 2024

NASA Earns Best Place to Work in Government for 12 Straight Years

Mission Success is in Our Hands: Brandon Reeves

 

https://www.nasa.gov/centers-and-facilities/marshall/the-marshall-star-for-may-22-2024/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 8:06 a.m. No.20904294   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA, IBM Research to Release New AI Model for Weather, Climate

MAY 22, 2024

 

Working together, NASA and IBM Research have developed a new artificial intelligence model to support a variety of weather and climate applications. The new model – known as the Privthi-weather-climate foundational model – uses artificial intelligence (AI) in ways that could vastly improve the resolution we’ll be able to get, opening the door to better regional and local weather and climate models.

 

Foundational models are large-scale, base models which are trained on large, unlabeled datasets and can be fine-tuned for a variety of applications. The Privthi-weather-climate model is trained on a broad set of data – in this case NASA data from NASA’s Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA-2)– and then makes use of AI learning abilities to apply patterns gleaned from the initial data across a broad range of additional scenarios.

 

“Advancing NASA’s Earth science for the benefit of humanity means delivering actionable science in ways that are useful to people, organizations, and communities. The rapid changes we’re witnessing on our home planet demand this strategy to meet the urgency of the moment,” said Karen St. Germain, director of the Earth Science Division of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. “The NASA foundation model will help us produce a tool that people can use: weather, seasonal and climate projections to help inform decisions on how to prepare, respond and mitigate.” 

 

With the Privthi-weather-climate model, researchers will be able to support many different climate applications that can be used throughout the science community. These applications include detecting and predicting severe weather patterns or natural disasters, creating targeted forecasts based on localized observations, improving spatial resolution on global climate simulations down to regional levels, and improving the representation of how physical processes are included in weather and climate models.

 

“These transformative AI models are reshaping data accessibility by significantly lowering the barrier of entry to using NASA’s scientific data,” said Kevin Murphy, NASA’s chief science data officer, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters. “Our open approach to sharing these models invites the global community to explore and harness the capabilities we’ve cultivated, ensuring that NASA’s investment enriches and benefits all.”

 

Privthi-weather-climate was developed through an open collaboration with IBM Research, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and NASA, including the agency’s Interagency Implementation and Advanced Concepts Team (IMPACT) at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

 

Privthi-weather-climate can capture the complex dynamics of atmospheric physics even when there is missing information thanks to the flexibility of the model’s architecture. This foundational model for weather and climate can scale to both global and regional areas without compromising resolution.

 

“This model is part of our overall strategy to develop a family of AI foundation models to support NASA’s science mission goals,” said Rahul Ramachandran, who leads IMPACT at Marshall. “These models will augment our capabilities to draw insights from our vast archives of Earth observations.”

 

Privthi-weather-climate is part of a larger model family– the Privthi family– which includes models trained on NASA’s Harmonized LandSat and Sentinel-2 data. The latest model serves as an open collaboration in line with NASA’s open science principles to make all data accessible and usable by communities everywhere. It will be released later this year on Hugging Face, a machine learning and data science platform that helps users build, deploy, and train machine learning models.

 

“The development of the NASA foundation model for weather and climate is an important step towards the democratization of NASA’s science and observation mission,” said Tsendgar Lee, program manager for NASA’s Research and Analysis Weather Focus Area, High-End Computing Program, and Data for Operation and Assessment. “We will continue developing new technology for climate scenario analysis and decision making.”

 

Along with IMPACT and IBM Research, development of Privthi-weather-climate featured significant contributions from NASA’s Office of the Chief Science Data Officer, NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office at Goddard Space Flight Center, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Colorado State University, and Stanford University.

 

https://science.nasa.gov/open-science/ai-model-weather-climate/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 8:20 a.m. No.20904338   🗄️.is 🔗kun

NASA’s TESS Finds Intriguing World Sized Between Earth, Venus

MAY 23, 2024

 

Using observations by NASA’s TESS (Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite) and many other facilities, two international teams of astronomers have discovered a planet between the sizes of Earth and Venus only 40 light-years away.

Multiple factors make it a candidate well-suited for further study using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope.

TESS stares at a large swath of the sky for about a month at a time, tracking the brightness changes of tens of thousands of stars at intervals ranging from 20 seconds to 30 minutes. Capturing transits — brief, regular dimmings of stars caused by the passage of orbiting worlds — is one of the mission’s primary goals.

 

“We’ve found the nearest, transiting, temperate, Earth-size world located to date,” said Masayuki Kuzuhara, a project assistant professor at the Astrobiology Center in Tokyo, who co-led one research team with Akihiko Fukui, a project assistant professor at the University of Tokyo.

“Although we don’t yet know whether it possesses an atmosphere, we’ve been thinking of it as an exo-Venus, with similar size and energy received from its star as our planetary neighbor in the solar system.”

The host star, called Gliese 12, is a cool red dwarf located almost 40 light-years away in the constellation Pisces. The star is only about 27% of the Sun’s size, with about 60% of the Sun’s surface temperature.

 

The newly discovered world, named Gliese 12 b, orbits every 12.8 days and is Earth’s size or slightly smaller — comparable to Venus. Assuming it has no atmosphere, the planet has a surface temperature estimated at around 107 degrees Fahrenheit (42 degrees Celsius).

Astronomers say that the diminutive sizes and masses of red dwarf stars make them ideal for finding Earth-size planets.

A smaller star means greater dimming for each transit, and a lower mass means an orbiting planet can produce a greater wobble, known as “reflex motion,” of the star. These effects make smaller planets easier to detect.

 

The lower luminosities of red dwarf stars also means their habitable zones — the range of orbital distances where liquid water could exist on a planet’s surface — lie closer to them.

This makes it easier to detect transiting planets within habitable zones around red dwarfs than those around stars emitting more energy.

The distance separating Gliese 12 and the new planet is just 7% of the distance between Earth and the Sun.

 

The planet receives 1.6 times more energy from its star as Earth does from the Sun and about 85% of what Venus experiences.

“Gliese 12 b represents one of the best targets to study whether Earth-size planets orbiting cool stars can retain their atmospheres, a crucial step to advance our understanding of habitability on planets across our galaxy,” said Shishir Dholakia, a doctoral student at the Centre for Astrophysics at the University of Southern Queensland in Australia.

He co-led a different research team with Larissa Palethorpe, a doctoral student at the University of Edinburgh and University College London.

 

Both teams suggest that studying Gliese 12 b may help unlock some aspects of our own solar system’s evolution.

“It is thought that Earth’s and Venus’s first atmospheres were stripped away and then replenished by volcanic outgassing and bombardments from residual material in the solar system,” Palethorpe explained.

“The Earth is habitable, but Venus is not due to its complete loss of water. Because Gliese 12 b is between Earth and Venus in temperature, its atmosphere could teach us a lot about the habitability pathways planets take as they develop.”

 

One important factor in retaining an atmosphere is the storminess of its star. Red dwarfs tend to be magnetically active, resulting in frequent, powerful X-ray flares. However, analyses by both teams conclude that Gliese 12 shows no signs of extreme behavior.

A paper led by Kuzuhara and Fukui was published May 23 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The Dholakia and Palethorpe findings were published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society on the same day.

 

During a transit, the host star’s light passes through any atmosphere. Different gas molecules absorb different colors, so the transit provides a set of chemical fingerprints that can be detected by telescopes like Webb.

“We know of only a handful of temperate planets similar to Earth that are both close enough to us and meet other criteria needed for this kind of study, called transmission spectroscopy, using current facilities,” said Michael McElwain, a research astrophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and a co-author of the Kuzuhara and Fukui paper.

 

https://science.nasa.gov/universe/exoplanets/nasas-tess-finds-intriguing-world-sized-between-earth-venus/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 8:41 a.m. No.20904416   🗄️.is 🔗kun

New NASA Prediction Of Worldwide Energy Resources (POWER) Tutorials

May 23, 2024

 

NASA's Prediction Of Worldwide Energy Resources (POWER) Project's mission is to improve learning, decisions, and outcomes in the renewable energy, sustainable infrastructure, and agroclimatology user communities. The project provides easily accessible, customized, and trusted NASA solar and meteorological data for past, current, and future climates for any location in the world. POWER improves the public and private capability for integrating these NASA Earth observations and model data into their workflows through a diverse suite of tools and services. The project provides free access to its Analysis Ready Data (ARD) via POWER's Application Programming Interface (API), Data Access Viewer (DAV), geospatial services, and cloud-enabled data store.

 

In a new NASA Earthdata video tutorial playlist, learn how to use NASA POWER tools and services to explore solar and meteorological datasets that support the renewable energy, sustainable building, and agroclimatology user communities.

 

cont.

 

https://www.earthdata.nasa.gov/news/new-nasa-prediction-worldwide-energy-resources-tutorials

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 9:03 a.m. No.20904506   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4519

NASA spacecraft spots dead robot on Mars surface

updated on May 23, 2024 at 5:59PM

 

NASA spotted a ‘dead’ robot on the surface of Mars in new images taken by its Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (or MRO) blasted off into space back in 2005, tasked with searching for evidence that water will persist on Mars’s surface for long periods of time.

Previous NASA missions to Mars have shown that water has flowed across the surface of the Red Planet in the past, but scientists are still unsure if that water stayed around long enough to support life.

 

Its high-resolution cameras have been able to capture Mars’s ‘ever-changing’ environment, with NASA saying it has observed ‘shifting sand dunes, seasonal ice, and the appearance of dust storms, avalanches, new gullies, and craters’.

“The retired lander was recently spotted by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

“By studying InSight’s landing site over time, scientists can see how quickly dust accumulates, which helps estimate the age of other surface disturbances.” Clever.

 

InSight spent four years investigating geological activity on Mars. As well as analyzing the planet’s core, it also provided NASA with daily weather reports.

Its mission officially drew to a close in December 2022, with NASA saying the lander had given Mars ‘its first thorough check-up since it formed 4.5 billion years ago’. Impressive.

InSight isn’t the only explorer that remains ‘retired’ on Mars – the Opportunity Rover, Phoenix lander and Ingenuity helicopter are also present, as are some discarded landing gear and parachutes.

Where’s Wall-E when you need him?

 

https://supercarblondie.com/nasa-spacecraft-spots-dead-robot-on-mars-surface/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 9:19 a.m. No.20904570   🗄️.is 🔗kun

See May's Full Flower Moon blossom in the night sky tonight

May 23, 2024

 

The full moon of May 2024 rides the Scorpion's back across the night sky tonight.

 

The Full Flower Moon will be in the Scorpius constellation tonight (May 23), rising in the southeast just after sunset. Because full moons occur when the sun and the moon are completely opposite one another in the sky, the moon will rise at sunset and set with the sunrise the following morning.

 

Because of its location in the sky tonight, the Full Flower Moon makes for an excellent guide to help you learn the stars of the Scorpius constellation. Shortly after it rises, the moon will occult - or hide - the red supergiant star Antares, which designates the "heart" of the Scorpion.

 

See our preview story for a full list of optimal viewing times for the U.S. locations that will be able to view the lunar occultation of Antares. Note that not every location will be able to see it, because the moon is close enough to Earth that moving from one location to another can significantly change the moon's apparent position against background stars.

 

Mercury, Venus and Jupiter are lost in the sun's glare tonight, but Mars and Saturn will rise in the east a few hours before sunrise.

 

The name "Flower Moon" comes from blooming flowers that appear in North America around this time of year. Other names include the Frog Moon, a name from the Indigenous Cree people of North America, named as such because frogs become active  and loud  in May in many locations.

 

https://www.space.com/full-flower-moon-may-23-2024

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 9:28 a.m. No.20904618   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Air Force makes Patrick Space Force Base the permanent STARCOM headquarters

MAY 22, 2024 / 8:44 PM

 

Patrick Space Force Base in Cape Canaveral, Fla., is the new headquarters for the U.S. Space Force Training and Readiness Command, which goes by STARCOM.

The move was announced Tuesday after a year of reviewing the site to ensure it was a suitable location and would not cause any environmental issues.

"Great news for Florida!" Sen Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said on social media Tuesday, adding that the move bolsters "Florida's growing leadership in space."

Rubio said STARCOM's mission is to prepare the Space Force to use innovation, education, training and tests to be the world's best.

 

Patrick Space Force Base is located on Cape Canaveral between Satellite Beach to the south and Cocoa Beach to the north and was listed as a preferred site last year.

The Air Force will train and relocate 350 personnel called "guardians" from Colorado to the new STARCOM base along Florida's Space Coast.

Space Force and Star Command are the U.S military's newest military units.

The base also is likely to become the home of Space Delta 10, which is a military unit responsible for wargaming to develop effective tactics and training.

 

https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2024/05/22/space-force-starcom-headquarters-cape-canaveral/9971716423956/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 9:51 a.m. No.20904684   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4686

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Euclid/ESA_s_Euclid_celebrates_first_science_with_sparkling_cosmic_views

 

ESA's Euclid celebrates first science with sparkling cosmic views

23/05/2024

 

Today, ESA’s Euclid space mission releases five unprecedented new views of the Universe.

The never-before-seen images demonstrate Euclid’s ability to unravel the secrets of the cosmos and enable scientists to hunt for rogue planets, use lensed galaxies to study mysterious matter, and explore the evolution of the Universe.

The new images are part of Euclid’s Early Release Observations. They accompany the mission’s first scientific data, also made public today, and 10 forthcoming science papers.

The treasure trove comes less than a year after the space telescope’s launch, and roughly six months after it returned its first full-colour images of the cosmos.

 

“Euclid is a unique, ground-breaking mission, and these are the first datasets to be made public – it’s an important milestone,” says Valeria Pettorino, ESA’s Euclid Project Scientist.

“The images and associated science findings are impressively diverse in terms of the objects and distances observed.

They include a variety of science applications, and yet represent a mere 24 hours of observations. They give just a hint of what Euclid can do. We are looking forward to six more years of data to come!”

 

The full set of early observations targeted 17 astronomical objects, from nearby clouds of gas and dust to distant clusters of galaxies, ahead of Euclid’s main survey.

This survey aims to uncover the secrets of the dark cosmos and reveal how and why the Universe looks as it does today.

“This space telescope intends to tackle the biggest open questions in cosmology,” adds Valeria. “And these early observations clearly demonstrate that Euclid is more than up to the task.”

 

Euclid will trace the hidden web-like foundations of the cosmos, map billions of galaxies across more than one-third of the sky, explore how our Universe formed and evolved over cosmic history, and study the most mysterious of its fundamental components: dark energy and dark matter.

The images obtained by Euclid are at least four times sharper than those we can take from ground-based telescopes. They cover large patches of sky at unrivalled depth, looking far into the distant Universe using both visible and infrared light.

“It’s no exaggeration to say that the results we’re seeing from Euclid are unprecedented,” says ESA Director of Science, Prof. Carole Mundell.

“Euclid’s first images, published in November, clearly illustrated the telescope’s vast potential to explore the dark Universe, and this second batch is no different.

 

“The beauty of Euclid is that it covers large regions of the sky in great detail and depth, and can capture a wide range of different objects all in the same image – from faint to bright, from distant to nearby, from the most massive of galaxy clusters to small planets.

We get both a very detailed and very wide view all at once. This amazing versatility has resulted in numerous new science results that, when combined with the results from Euclid’s surveying over the coming years, will significantly alter our understanding of the Universe.”

While visually stunning, the images are far more than beautiful snapshots; they reveal new physical properties of the Universe thanks to Euclid’s novel and unique observing capabilities.

These scientific secrets are detailed further in a number of accompanying papers released by the Euclid collaboration, made available tomorrow on arXiv (linked below), together with five key reference papers about the Euclid mission.

 

The early findings showcase Euclid’s ability to search star-forming regions for free-floating ‘rogue’ planets just four times the mass of Jupiter; study the outer regions of star clusters in unprecedented detail; and map different star populations to explore how galaxies have evolved over time.

They reveal how the space telescope can detect individual star clusters in distant groups and clusters of galaxies; identify a rich harvest of new dwarf galaxies; see the light from stars ripped away from their parent galaxies – and much more.

Euclid produced this early catalogue in just a single day, revealing over 11 million objects in visible light and 5 million more in infrared light.

This catalogue has resulted in significant new science.

 

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Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 9:52 a.m. No.20904686   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20904684

“Euclid demonstrates European excellence in frontier science and state-of-the-art technology, and showcases the importance of international collaboration,” says ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher. “The mission is the result of many years of hard work from scientists, engineers and industry throughout Europe and from members of the Euclid scientific consortium around the world, all brought together by ESA.

They can be proud of this achievement – the results are no small feat for such an ambitious mission and such complex fundamental science.

Euclid is at the very beginning of its exciting journey to map the structure of the Universe.”

 

Messier 78

This breathtaking image features Messier 78, a vibrant star nursery enveloped in interstellar dust. Euclid peered deep into this nursery using its infrared camera, exposing hidden regions of star formation for the first time, mapping its complex filaments of gas and dust in unprecedented detail, and uncovering newly formed stars and planets.

Euclid’s instruments can detect objects just a few times the mass of Jupiter, and its infrared ‘eyes’ reveal over 300 000 new objects in this field of view alone.

Scientists are using this dataset to study the amount and ratio of stars and smaller (sub-stellar) objects found here – key to understanding the dynamics of how star populations form and change over time.

 

NGC 6744

In this image Euclid showcases NGC 6744, an archetype of the kind of galaxy currently forming most of the stars in the local Universe.

Euclid’s large field-of-view covers the entire galaxy, capturing not only spiral structure on larger scales but also exquisite detail on small spatial scales. This includes feather-like lanes of dust emerging as ‘spurs’ from the spiral arms, shown here with incredible clarity.

Scientists are using this dataset to understand how dust and gas are linked to star formation; map how different star populations are distributed throughout galaxies and where stars are currently forming; and unravel the physics behind the structure of spiral galaxies, something that is still not fully understood after decades of study.

 

Abell 2764 (and bright star)

This view shows the galaxy cluster Abell 2764 (top right), which comprises hundreds of galaxies within a vast halo of dark matter.

Euclid captures many objects in this patch of sky, including background galaxies, more distant clusters, and interacting galaxies throwing off streams and shells of stars.

This complete view of Abell 2764 and surroundings — obtained thanks to Euclid’s impressively wide field-of-view — allows scientists to ascertain the radius of the cluster and see its outskirts with faraway galaxies still in frame.

Euclid’s observations of Abell 2764 are also allowing scientists to further explore galaxies in the distant cosmic dark ages, as with Abell 2390.

 

Also seen here is a very bright foreground star that lies within our own galaxy (V*BP-Phoenicis/HD 1973, a star within our galaxy and in the southern hemisphere that’s nearly bright enough to be seen by the human eye).

When we look at a star through a telescope, its light is scattered outwards into a diffuse circular halo due to the telescope’s optics.

Euclid was designed to make this scatter as small as possible.

As a result, the star causes little disturbance, allowing us to capture faint distant galaxies near the line of sight without being blinded by the star’s brightness.

 

Dorado Group

Here, Euclid captures galaxies evolving and merging ‘in action’ in the Dorado galaxy group, with beautiful tidal tails and shells seen as a result of ongoing interactions.

Scientists are using this dataset to study how galaxies evolve, to improve our models of cosmic history and understand how galaxies form within halos of dark matter.

This image showcases Euclid’s versatility: a wide array of galaxies is visible here, from very bright to very faint.

Thanks to Euclid’s unique combination of large field-of-view, remarkable depth, and high spatial resolution, it can capture tiny (star clusters), wider (galaxy cores) and extended (tidal tails) features all in one frame.

Scientists are also seeking distant individual clusters of stars known as globular clusters to trace their galactic history and dynamics.

 

https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Euclid/ESA_s_Euclid_celebrates_first_science_with_sparkling_cosmic_views

 

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Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 10:08 a.m. No.20904737   🗄️.is 🔗kun

House Armed Services Committee advances 2025 defense policy bill

May 23, 2024

 

The House Armed Services Committee in a late-night vote May 22 approved its version of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2025 by a vote of 57-1.

More than 700 amendments were negotiated. The NDAA, which authorizes $850 billion for the Defense Department, now heads to the House floor.

One of the more contentious amendments on space policy was on the Space National Guard.The proposal submitted by Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) requires governors to approve any transfer of Air National Guard units to the Space Force.

It also requires annual reports to Congress on the status of transfers of Air Guard units to the Space Force.

 

This provision could impact the Space Force’s plans to allow Air Guard members responsible for space missions into the Space Force’s new hybrid structure of full-time and part-time workforce.

The HASC voted to give the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Space Acquisition and Integration oversight over the Contractor Responsibility Watch List (CRWL).

The Air Force sought that authority in order to hold accountable contractors that underperform on acquisition programs.

The bill establishes a program known as the Commercial Augmentation Space Reserve to allow DoD to sign agreements with commercial companies that would commit to providing satellite capacity or other services to the military during conflicts.

 

The committee also approved an amendment requiring the Department of the Air Force to brief Congress on how it plans to leverage commercial solutions to meet the mission areas identified in the U.S. Space Force Commercial Space Strategy published in April.

The HASC passed an amendment from Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) directing the Pentagon to assess the impact on intelligence sources of leaked classified information about Russia’s development of an anti-satellite nuclear weapon.

That provision was directed at a social media post in February by Rep. Mike Turner (R-Ohio) warning of a grave national security threat and urging the Biden administration to declassify and discuss the information publicly.

Turner opposed Moulton’s provision but it still passed.

 

https://spacenews.com/house-armed-services-committee-advances-2025-defense-policy-bill/

Anonymous ID: 3b4ba3 May 23, 2024, 10:31 a.m. No.20904817   🗄️.is 🔗kun

B-21 Raider continues flight test, production

May 22, 2024

 

Following its formal unveiling, Dec. 2, 2022, the B-21 Raider began flight testing here where it continues to make progress toward becoming the backbone of the U.S. Air Force bomber fleet.

On May 8, 2024, during testimony at the Senate Armed Services committee, Andrew Hunter, Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics, highlighted B-21 flight testing is on track to meet timelines and deliver to the warfighter.

“We are in the flight test program, the flight test program is proceeding well,” said Hunter in response to a question about the B-21 program.

 

“It is doing what flight test programs are designed to do, which is helping us learn about the unique characteristics of this platform, but in a very, very effective way.”

Hunter explained this is the first aircraft that is more digital than not, which contributes to the program meeting requirements.

The B-21 is a long-range, highly survivable, penetrating strike stealth bomber that will incrementally replace the B-1 and B-2 bombers and will play a major role supporting national security objectives and assuring U.S. allies and partners across the globe.

 

The B-21 weapon system is manufactured under the Air Force's contract with Northrop Grumman.

It is designed with an open systems architecture, enabling rapid insertion of mature technologies, and allowing the aircraft to remain effective as threats evolve over time.

The aircraft is expected to enter service in the mid-2020s with a production goal of a minimum of 100 aircraft.

 

The Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office manages the acquisition program, focusing on making test aircraft as production representative as possible.

Test aircraft are built on the same manufacturing line and use the same manning and tooling that will be used in the eventual production.

The AFRCO’s strategy includes building test aircraft as production-representative as possible.

 

Rather than a traditional flight prototype approach, B-21 test aircraft are built including mission systems using the same manufacturing processes and tooling for production aircraft.

This approach in development laid the groundwork for production to start more quickly.

When the B-21 enters the service, Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, will be the first B-21 main operating base and location of the Formal Training Unit.

Whiteman AFB, Missouri, and Dyess AFB, Texas, are the preferred locations for the remaining bases and will receive aircraft as they become available.

 

https://www.edwards.af.mil/News/Article-View/Article/3784504/b-21-raider-continues-flight-test-production/