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Civilian/News
NASA Tests New Robotic Arm for Space Assembly
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 7, 2018
NASA Tests New Robotic Arm for Space Assembly


NASA Tests New Robotic Arm for Space AssemblyNASA has conducted a ground demonstration of a robotic arm designed to perform spacecraft assembly operations in areas beyond Earth’s atmosphere.

The Tension Actuated in Space MANipulator or TALISMAN demonstrated its basic function during a ground test held at the Structures and Materials Test Laboratory in Langley Research Center, Virginia, the space agency said Tuesday.

During the test, NASA personnel moved the TALISMAN’s longer arm to different positions.

The test aimed to demonstrate the robotic arm’s readiness for the more advanced stages of comprehensive testing.

Futures tests are expected to involve the robotic arm moving objects on a strut.

The TALISMAN effort is part of the Commercial Infrastructure for Robotic Assembly and Servicing program that aims to address NASA’s needs for in-space assembly and construction.

CIRAS is done in collaboration with Orbital ATK.

TALISMAN joins the NASA Intelligent Jigging and Assembly Robot or NINJAR; and the Strut Assembly, Manufacturing, Utility and Robotic Aid or SAMURAI to compose CIRAS.

 

Civilian/News
Jerome Powell Takes Oath as Fed Chief
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 6, 2018
Jerome Powell Takes Oath as Fed Chief


Jerome Powell Takes Oath as Fed Chief
Jerome Powell

Jerome Powell was sworn in as chairman of the Federal Reserve System’s board of governors Monday, two months after President Donald Trump nominated him to the position.

The Federal Reserve said Monday Vice Chairman Randal Quarles led the oath-taking ceremony for Powell, who succeeds former Chair Janet Yellen and will serve a four-year term.

Powell’s term as a member of the Fed’s board will end Jan. 31, 2028.

The three-decade financial services veteran previously worked at Bankers Trust and Carlyle Group.

He also also held assistant secretary and undersecretary roles at the Treasury Department, and served as a lawyer and an investment banker in New York City.

DoD/News
US-Russia Treaty on Nuclear Arms Limits Reaches Deadline
by Ramona Adams
Published on February 6, 2018
US-Russia Treaty on Nuclear Arms Limits Reaches Deadline


US-Russia Treaty on Nuclear Arms Limits Reaches DeadlineA treaty between U.S. and Russia that limits the two countries’ nuclear arsenal has taken effect on Monday, seven years after it was signed.

The State Department said Monday the U.S. government has fully complied with the Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms, or New START, since August 2017.

The department added that the U.S. government will confirm Russia’s compliance with New START through a scheduled data exchange.

The two countries have shared data on their strategic nuclear arsenals twice every year over the last seven years as part of the agreement and the next data exchange is slated to occur within the next month.

U.S. officials have conducted short-notice, on-site inspections at Russian military bases and facilities through the treaty to verify data on Russia’s strategic nuclear arsenal.

The State Department noted that the U.S. government will continue to implement New START in cooperation with Russia as well as support efforts to eliminate nuclear weapons worldwide.

News
Navy Completes Acceptance Trials for 2nd Zumwalt-Class Destroyer Ship
by Joanna Crews
Published on February 6, 2018
Navy Completes Acceptance Trials for 2nd Zumwalt-Class Destroyer Ship


Navy Completes Acceptance Trials for 2nd Zumwalt-Class Destroyer ShipThe U.S. Navy‘s evaluated systems onboard its second Zumwalt-class guided missile destroyer ship as part of acceptance trials that concluded Thursday.

The service branch said Monday its Board of Inspection and Survey assessed the future USS Michael Monsoor and its crew to ensure compliance with Navy specifications.

Capt. Kevin Smith, DDG 1000 class program manager, said the DDG 1001 ship performed well during the acceptance trials.

INSURV also evaluated navigation, damage control, mechanical, electrical, combat, communications and propulsion systems against the service branch’s specifications.

General Dynamics‘ Bath Iron Works subsidiary built and christened Monsoor at a company shipyard in Maine in June 2016.

Zumwalt-class destroyers employ a wave-piercing tumblehome hull, an electric propulsion system and warfighting technology designed for sea control, deterrence, power projection and command-and-control operations.

Civilian/Government Technology/News
Report: GSA’s Proposed Rule to Require Compliance With NIST’s Federal Data Protection Framework
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 6, 2018
Report: GSA’s Proposed Rule to Require Compliance With NIST’s Federal Data Protection Framework


Report: GSA’s Proposed Rule to Require Compliance With NIST’s Federal Data Protection FrameworkThe General Services Administration has introduced a proposed rule that would direct civilian contractors to comply with a National Institute of Standards and Technology framework that aims to protect controlled unclassified information in nonfederal data systems, Federal News Radio reported Monday.

GSA will seek public comments on the proposed rule between April and June 2018.

NIST’s Special Publication 800-171 took effect at the end of 2017 and requires contractors, federal grant recipients, state governments and other nonfederal entities to safeguard CUI data.

The Defense Department originally required contractors to comply with the NIST framework by Jan. 1, but instead directed companies to have “system security plans” in place by the end of December 2017 to meet the standards.

DoD/News
Air Force Forms Group to Develop Comprehensive EW Strategy
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 6, 2018
Air Force Forms Group to Develop Comprehensive EW Strategy


Air Force Forms Group to Develop Comprehensive EW StrategyThe U.S. Air Force has created a cross-functional team that will be tasked to formulate a comprehensive strategy for the service branch to manage electronic warfare operations across the electromagnetic spectrum.

Brig. Gen. David Gaedecke — director of cyberspace operations and warfighting integration at the Air Force — will lead the enterprise capability collaboration group, the service branch said Monday.

“The spectrum is so broad, relied upon by all, and increasingly congested; so the first challenge of this effort is to scope the issue,” Gaedecke said.

“We’ll draw not only from our experts in the military, but also previous scientific advisory boards, defense science boards and industry professionals to form a cohesive and comprehensive electronic warfare and electromagnetic spectrum strategy,” he added.

The team aims to complete EW strategy research and development efforts within 12 to 18 months as part of a push to help maintain the service branch’s competitive edge throughout the spectrum.

Gaedecke intends to formally present the group on Wednesday at the Air Force Strategic Development Planning and Experimentation meeting at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland.

Civilian/News/Space
NASA Picks Research Proposals to Study Arctic Warming, Mineral Dust Effects on Atmosphere
by Ramona Adams
Published on February 6, 2018
NASA Picks Research Proposals to Study Arctic Warming, Mineral Dust Effects on Atmosphere


NASA Picks Research Proposals to Study Arctic Warming, Mineral Dust Effects on AtmosphereNASA has chosen two research projects to build space instruments that will study Arctic warming and the effects of mineral dust on the atmosphere.

The space agency said Tuesday it selected the Polar Radiant Energy in the Far Infrared Experiment, or PREFIRE, and the Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation, or EMIT, among 14 proposals submitted for NASA’s fourth Earth Venture mission.

Earth Venture funds small science investigations that are designed to complement larger NASA missions.

PREFIRE will launch two small satellites called CubeSats to investigate Arctic warming, sea ice loss and ice-sheet melting.

The Arctic radiates excess energy from the sun back to space, helping to regulate Earth’s temperature.

PREFIRE will work to collect information on wavelengths of energy radiating from Earth that current satellite instruments cannot detect.

Tristan L’Ecuyer of the University of Wisconsin serves as principal investigator of PREFIRE and will work with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Utah State University’s Space Dynamics Laboratory.

EMIT will attach a sensor to the International Space Station to identify the mineral composition of natural sources that release dust aerosols across the world.

Robert Green of NASA JPL is the principal investigator of the mission, which will help determine whether dust aerosols have a warming or cooling effect on the atmosphere.

The EMIT sensor is partly based on NASA’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper instrument aboard the Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft of India’s space agency.

DoD/News
DARPA Study Aims to Detect Enemy Activity in Strategic Waters
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 6, 2018
DARPA Study Aims to Detect Enemy Activity in Strategic Waters


DARPA Study Aims to Detect Enemy Activity in Strategic WatersThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has launched a new program that aims to study and identify marine organisms that could help sensor systems detect and track the activities of manned underwater vehicles and drones in strategic waters.

The Persistent Aquatic Living Sensors program also seeks to investigate the responses of marine life to such vehicles and build a network of hardware systems that will work to collect, interpret and relay the organisms’ signals and behaviors to end users, DARPA said Friday.

“The U.S. Navy’s current approach to detecting and monitoring underwater vehicles is hardware-centric and resource intensive,” said Lori Adornato, PALS program manager at DARPA’s biological technologies office.

“If we can tap into the innate sensing capabilities of living organisms that are ubiquitous in the oceans, we can extend our ability to track adversary activity and do so discreetly, on a persistent basis, and with enough precision to characterize the size and type of adversary vehicles.”

DARPA expects PALS to be a four-year research initiative that will incorporate insights from various areas such as biology, analytics, physics, chemistry, machine learning and electrical engineering.

The agency said it will host a proposers day on March 2 in Arlington, Virginia, to discuss the PALS program with interested vendors.

Civilian/News
Kirstjen Nielsen, Ralph Goodale Meet to Discuss US-Canada Security Cooperation
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 6, 2018
Kirstjen Nielsen, Ralph Goodale Meet to Discuss US-Canada Security Cooperation


Kirstjen Nielsen, Ralph Goodale Meet to Discuss US-Canada Security CooperationRalph Goodale, Canadian minister for public safety and emergency preparedness, met with Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen in Washington to discuss U.S.-Canada cooperation on efforts to safeguard both countries against national security threats.

Nielsen and Goodale also discussed other topics such as cybersecurity, migration, cannabis and opioid, preclearance and irregular migration during their meeting, the Canadian government said Monday.

Both officials talked about their respective governments’ obligation to manage transition and trade activities along the U.S.-Canada border.

They have committed to continue to identify trade and travel management approaches that will support employment and economy in both countries.

The U.S. and Canada have jointly concurred to enact the Agreement on Land, Rail, Marine and Air Transport Pre-clearance and the Entry/Exit initiative that seeks to expedite confirmation of a traveler’s departure at the border.

Civilian/News/Space
NASA Concludes Structural Qualification Tests on SLS Engine Section
by Nichols Martin
Published on February 5, 2018
NASA Concludes Structural Qualification Tests on SLS Engine Section


NASA Concludes Structural Qualification Tests on SLS Engine SectionNASA engineers have completed structural qualification tests on the Space Launch System‘s core stage engine section at Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama.

The rocket’s four RS-25 engines and two solid rocket booster attachments will compose the engine section located beneath the SLS’ 212-foot-tall core stage, NASA said Saturday.

The engine section is designed to generate more than eight million pounds of thrust when launched for flight missions to the moon, Mars and other deep-space destinations.

NASA built the engine section’s structural test unit at the agency’s Michoud Assembly Facility in Louisiana, then collaborated with Boeing, the prime contractor on the SLS core stage, to conduct the tests at MSFC.

Engineers place the hardware in a 50-foot, 1.7 million-pound test stand and tested the structure using hydraulic cylinders to generate millions of pounds in force.

The test platform used a cryogenic supply system that simulated very cold temperatures of SLS’ liquid hydrogen tank.

Flight loads were simulated through the use of more than 50 actuators, the agency noted.

NASA verified the capacities of the engine section and downcomer after agency engineers analyzed more than 3,000 data channels for each test case.

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