NASA and the Northrop Grumman yesterday unveiled the first of two RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aerial vehicles that the agency will fit with special instruments for use starting later this year in high-altitude environmental science research. The rollout took place at NASA’s Dryden Flight Research Center in Edwards AFB, Calif. “The Global Hawks will provide superb new measurement possibilities for our climate science and applications programs,” said Michael Freilich, director of NASA’s Earth Science Division. The two Global Hawks are former Air Force assets from the seven original demonstrator flight vehicles. NOAA is partnering with NASA to exploit these new airborne tools. NASA plans six long-duration missions over the Pacific and Arctic regions beginning in the late spring. (NASA release)
Air Force Secretary Frank Kendall doesn’t see great value in trying to break the Sentinel ICBM program off as a separate budget item the way the Navy has with its ballistic-missile submarine program, saying such a move wouldn’t create any new money for the Air Force to spend on other…