2 octobre 2024 | International, Terrestre

Carlyle-backed StandardAero prices IPO above range to raise $1.44 billion, sources say

Sur le même sujet

  • Augmentation du budget Défense de l’Allemagne : un challenge pour la France

    23 mars 2022 | International, Aérospatial, Naval, Terrestre, C4ISR, Sécurité

    Augmentation du budget Défense de l’Allemagne : un challenge pour la France

    L'augmentation très forte de son budget de Défense par l'Allemagne représente un challenge pour la France, qui devra répondre avec la même ambition pour conserver son « leadership » en matière de Défense en Europe, relève La Tribune. « Pour garder son rang, la France doit répondre avec la même ambition et les mêmes objectifs en disant qu'elle va augmenter son budget et qu'elle souhaite faire des coopérations. La France doit saisir la balle au bond », estime un observateur cité par le quotidien. Le Président de la République, Emmanuel Macron, a confirmé le 17 mars la trajectoire pour 2025 de l'actuelle Loi de programmation militaire, à hauteur de 50 Md€. « Nous avons lancé plusieurs projets qui devront se poursuivre de coopérations capacitaires, et la France portera la défense d'un réinvestissement dans le fonds européen de Défense au niveau européen pour pouvoir justement aller plus loin et consolider cet effort », a-t-il précisé. « Je demanderai au chef d'état-major des Armées de pouvoir réévaluer tous les besoins qui apparaissent, à la lumière de la guerre que nous sommes en train de vivre et de la mise en œuvre de la Loi de programmation militaire depuis 2019 », a-t-il également indiqué. La Tribune du 22 mars

  • Ministry of the Armed Forces brings development of future Joint Light Helicopter forward

    31 mai 2019 | International, Aérospatial

    Ministry of the Armed Forces brings development of future Joint Light Helicopter forward

    The French Minister of the Armed Forces, Florence Parly, has announced that the launch of the Joint Light Helicopter (Hélicoptère Interarmées Léger, HIL) program has been brought forward to 2021. The HIL program, for which the Airbus Helicopters' H160 was selected in 2017, was initially scheduled for launch in 2022 by the current military budget law. Launching the program earlier will enable delivery of the first H160Ms to the French Armed Forces to be advanced to 2026. During a visit to the Airbus Helicopters headquarters, the Minister also revealed the full-scale mock up of the H160M that will be presented on the Ministry of the Armed Forces stand at the next Paris Air Show. The helicopter was also given its official name and will be designated as “Guépard” (“Cheetah”) by the French Armed Forces. The H160 was designed to be a modular helicopter, enabling its military version, with a single platform, to perform missions ranging from commando infiltration to air intercept, fire support, and anti-ship warfare in order to meet the needs of the army, the navy and the air force through the HIL program. “We are proud that the HIL is considered a strategic program. I would like to thank the Ministry, the French Defence Procurement Agency DGA and the armed forces for their trust and for the close collaboration which helped create the conditions for the program to be brought forward within the framework of the current military budget law,” said Bruno Even, CEO of Airbus Helicopters. “This will make it possible to speed up the replacement of the older generation of aircraft, while optimizing the support and availability of the French State's helicopter fleet. Our teams are committed to delivering an aircraft in 2026 that meets the needs of the French Armed Forces in terms of availability, performance and capability, thus enabling it to rapidly become the new benchmark on the world's medium-lift military helicopter market.” Built around a platform that will enter service next year, the HIL program will benefit from many of the advantages inherent in the civil H160, particularly in terms of support, with simplified maintenance and lower operating costs than the previous generation of helicopters in this category. https://www.verticalmag.com/press-releases/ministry-of-the-armed-forces-brings-development-of-future-joint-light-helicopter-forward/

  • A robot as slow as a snail ... on purpose

    20 août 2019 | International, Autre défense

    A robot as slow as a snail ... on purpose

    By: Kelsey D. Atherton Snails and slugs are so commonplace that we overlook the weirdness of how they move, gliding on a thin film across all sorts of terrain and obstacles. Popular imagination focuses on how slow this movement is, the snail defined by its pace, but it is at least as remarkable that the same mechanism lets a snail climb walls and move along ceilings. The movement is novel enough that there is now a snail-inspired robot, sliding across surfaces on an adhesive membrane, powered by a laser. The snail robot, produced by a joint research team at the University of Warsaw Poland, together with colleagues from Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University in Suzhou, China, created a centimeter-long robot powered by light. The research, published July in Macromolecular Rapid Communications, sheds new insight on how animals move in the wild, and on how small machines could be built to take advantage of that same motion. Why might military planners or designers be interested in snail-like movement? The ability to scale surfaces and cling to them alone is worth study and possibly future adaptation. There's also the simple efficiency of a creature that maneuvers on a single, durable foot. “Gastropods' adhesive locomotion has some unique properties: Using a thin layer of mucus, snails and slugs can navigate challenging environments, including glass, polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE, Teflon), metal surfaces, sand, and (famously) razor blades, with only few super-hydrophobic coatings able to prevent them from crawling up a vertical surface,” write the authors. “The low complexity of a single continuous foot promises advantages in design and fabrication as well as resistance to adverse external conditions and wear, while constant contact with the surface provides a high margin of failure resistance (e.g., slip or detachment).” Snails can literally move along the edge of the spear unscathed. Surely, there's something in a robot that can do the same. The small snail robot looks like nothing so much as a discarded stick of gum, and is much smaller. At just a centimeter in length, this is not a platform capable of demonstrating much more than movement. The machine is made of Liquid Crystalline Elastomers, which can change shape when scanned by light. Combined with an artificial mucus later formed of glycerin, the robot is able to move, climb over surfaces, and even up a vertical wall, on a glass ceiling, and over obstacles, while it is powered by a laser. It does all of this at 1/50th the speed a snail would. This leaves the implications of such technology in a more distant future. Imagine a sensor that could crawl into position on the side of a building, and then stay there as combat roars around it. Or perhaps the application is as a robot adhesive, crawling charges into place at the remote direction of imperceptible light. Directing a robot into an unexpected position, and having it stay there with adhesive, could be a useful tool for future operations, and one that would be built upon research like this. The robot may be comically slow now. The pace of the technologies around it is not. https://www.c4isrnet.com/unmanned/robotics/2019/08/19/do-snail-robots-foreshadow-the-sticky-grenades-of-the-future/

Toutes les nouvelles