A team of eight personnel at the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Space Vehicles Directorate at Kirtland AFB, N.M., is working on a set of three flywheels that will demonstrate the technology of combined attitude control and energy storage on a satellite. They expect results by this summer. Rotating discs called flywheels have been used as spacecraft positioning devices but have not been considered for power purposes extensively. The Flywheel Attitude Control, Energy Transmission and Storage (FACETS) experiment contains a device that is similar to a car alternator, converting rotational power into electricity to operate payloads. The system has potential to benefit the Space Radar system, which needs high power levels during radar operation and which might otherwise be totally reliant on large chemical batteries.
Hawaii F-22s Wrap Up Deployment to Japan
April 9, 2021
F-22s and Airmen from Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii, forward deployed to Japan for almost one month to train with Japanese and U.S. Marine Corps aircraft as part of a “dynamic force employment” operation. The Raptors from the Active-duty 19th Fighter Squadron and Air National Guard 199th Fighter Squadron deployed…