Volume 12, Issue 12

More content from Volume 12, Issue 12

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Engineers at Northrop Grumman's Navigation Systems division in Agoura Hills, Calif., are upgrading the workstation electronics for the U.S. Marine Corps AN/TYQ-23 Tactical Air...
Dec. 1, 2001
It looks like Lockheed Martin has a lock on the U.S. manned jet fighter business for the foreseeable future.
Dec. 1, 2001
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Engineers at Time Domain Corp. in Huntsville, Ala., are developing a handheld, through-wall surveillance radar device with an ultra wideband signal called SoldierVision.
Dec. 1, 2001
U.S. Navy researchers are eying a new fiber optic gyro (FOG) inertial navigation system for their fleet of Ohio-class (SSBN 726) ballistic missile submarines.
Dec. 1, 2001
Officials at Curtiss-Wright Corp. took steps to expand their ground-defense business last month with their $41 million acquisition of Lau Defense Systems.
Dec. 1, 2001
Scientists from the Bell Labs segment of Lucent Technologies in Murray Hill, N.J., are reporting creation of a new class of single-molecule organic transistors.
Dec. 1, 2001
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Solid-state memory grows in popularity for niche applications, including military and aerospace uses, yet magnetic and optical memory continue to dominate desktop commercial application...
Dec. 1, 2001
The future Lockheed Martin F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) will include a dizzying array of advanced electronic and opto-electronic sensors, computers, and communications
Dec. 1, 2001
UAVs are neither low-cost nor limited-capability anymore
Dec. 1, 2001
A professional and patriotic editorial, Shame on you for that editorial, The wait is not long for all military-grade electronic parts
Dec. 1, 2001