Operational since the 1940s, the Air Force’s high-altitude balloon program still plays an important role in evaluating scientific experiments. “We’re able to fly payloads for several hours to a few days in the stratosphere to test them in an environment similar to space,” said Maj. Kenyon Orme, the program’s manager in the Air Force Research Lab’s space vehicles directorate at Kirtland AFB, N.M. He added, “We can do it for less money than a space launch would cost and we have the added advantage of returning the hardware to the customer.” In the past two years, there have been more than 10 missions from municipal airports in Holbrook, Ariz., and Belen and Santa Rosa, N.M. In late September, for example, program officials staged two test flights of FAA’s Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast payload. The next flights are tentatively scheduled for 2011. (Kirtland report by Michael P. Kleiman)
The nation needs a better-coordinated policy for dealing with unmanned aerial systems that threaten domestic bases, Air Force vice chief of staff Gen. James C. Slife told a panel of the Senate Armed Services Committee. He and Pentagon acquisition and sustainment chief William LaPlante co-chair a panel looking at counter-UAS…