Lockheed Martin ARRW knocked out of US hypersonic missile race

The options for a practical hypersonic missile for the US have narrowed to one after Assistant Secretary of the Air Force Andrew P. Hunter told the House Armed Services Committee that the Department of Defense is cancelling Lockheed Martin’s ARRW (AGM-… Continue reading Lockheed Martin ARRW knocked out of US hypersonic missile race

Monovortex Split-Seconds Chronograph “controls the forces of gravity”

At Watches & Wonders Geneva 2023, Swiss watch manufacturer Roger Dubuis has unveiled its concept wrist timepiece called the Monovortex Split-Seconds Chronograph that introduces three new complications to the world of haute horlogerie.Continue ReadingCa… Continue reading Monovortex Split-Seconds Chronograph “controls the forces of gravity”

BAE Systems successfully tests artillery shell with double the range

BAE Systems and the US Army have successfully test fired a Sub-Caliber Artillery Long-Range Projectile with Enhanced Lethality from a 155 mm XM907E2 cannon at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico with double the range of current precision guided… Continue reading BAE Systems successfully tests artillery shell with double the range

US Army chooses V-BAT VTOL drone as potential RQ-7B Shadow replacement

The US Army has chosen the enhanced vertical liftoff V-BAT UAS developed by Northrop Grumman and Shield AI to take part in the Army’s Future Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System (FTUAS) competition, Increment 2, to find a replacement for the venerable RQ-… Continue reading US Army chooses V-BAT VTOL drone as potential RQ-7B Shadow replacement

Airbus tanker plane takes autonomous control of multiple drones

In another milestone on the road to fully Autonomous Formation Flight and Autonomous Air-to-Air Refueling (A4R), Airbus Defence and Space has autonomously guided and controlled a drone using an A310 Multi-Role Tanker Transport (MRTT) flying testbed.Con… Continue reading Airbus tanker plane takes autonomous control of multiple drones

Widening of “doomsday glacier’s” main ice stream would accelerate ice loss

A new study by Stanford University suggests that an 80-mile-wide (130-km) stream of ice in the heart of Antarctica’s “doomsday glacier” may expand over the next 20 years, which would increase its ice loss and contribute to sea level rises.Continue Read… Continue reading Widening of “doomsday glacier’s” main ice stream would accelerate ice loss