January
Modernisation of 36 McDonnell Douglas F4E Phantoms for the Hellenic Air
Force is well under way. Beginning in March 2000, the work is carried
out by DASA in Munich and the Phantom, which first entered service in
the 1960's, will receive avionics and weapons upgrades.
1 January
Airbus
Integrated Company comes into existence, formed as part of the European
Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS).![]()
8 January
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announces its
expectation for the Voyager 1 spacecraft to reach the beginnings of interstellar
space in 2002/2003. This will be indicated by the measurement of the 'termination
shock' where the solar and interstellar winds interact, which marks the
beginning of interstellar space. Voyager 1, the farthest human made object
from Earth, was launched in 1977.
9 January
China launches a 'Shenzhou' spacecraft on its second unmanned test flight
and the Chinese government has plans to launch a manned Shenzhou in 2005.
23 January
The first pictures of the Chinese J10 Chengdu fighter become public. The
aircraft is revealed to be a single-seat single-engined canard delta and
is seen as an attempt by the Chinese to leap-frog two generations of fighter
development.
30 January
Contact with the deep space probe Pioneer 10 is lost. The last signal
received from the probe is about 11 billion kilometres (7 billion miles)
from Earth. Launched in 1972, it is the first man made object to leave
the solar system.
16 February
Allied aircraft attack Iraqi military control and communications sites
south of Baghdad. The attacks come in response to continued threats to
Allied aircraft policing the Southern No-Fly zone from Iraqi anti aircraft
systems
21 February
A General Atomics RQ1 Predator Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) test fires
a laser guided AGM114 Hellfire missile.
3 March
A Thai airways International Boeing 737-400 is destroyed while parked
at Bangkok international airport. The explosion and subsequent fire occur
35 minutes before Thailand's Prime Minister is due to board the aircraft
for a flight to Chaing Mai.
6 March
Northrop Grumman RQ4A Global Hawk Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) is cleared
for production and testing with the United States Air Force.
11 March
The Lockheed Martin X35A Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) completes its flight
test schedule, logging 73 flights and 58 hours flying time. The X35B Short
Take-Off Vertical Landing (STOVL) variant of the JSF begins testing of
its Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) capabilities.
15 March
Two hijackers, identifying themselves as Chechen rebels, seize control
of a Vnukovo Airlines Tu154 with 162 passengers on board as it departs
Istanbul Ataturk airport. The aircraft lands safely at Medina airport
in Saudi Arabia, where the hijack is brought to an end by Saudi Special
Forces, who storm the airplane, killing one of the hijackers, a passenger
and a stewardess.
23 March
The Russian space station Mir ends its 15 year career in space at 0559hrs
GMT with a successful de-orbit and re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere.
Most of the space station disintegrates on re-enty, but 27 tons of debris
fall into the ocean 2,800 kilometres (1,700 miles) east of New Zealand.
During its career, Mir made 86,320 orbits, travelled 3.5 billion kilometres,
was visited by 104 individuals and 110 spacecraft, conducted some 23,000
experiments and 140 spacewalks.
27 March
Boeing announces it is planning the development of new series of airliners
that will be designed to fly higher, further and faster than current commercial
airliners.
27 March
Investigators are unable to determine the ignition source of an explosion
in a Thai Airways International Boeing 737 on 3 March. There was no evidence
to support the notion of sabotage.
1 April
United States Navy EP3E Aries III electronic and signals intelligence
reconnaissance aircraft collides with a J811 Finback of the Peoples Liberation
Army Navy Air Force (PLANAF) 70 miles from the Island of Hainan. The Aries
III aircraft makes an emergency landing at Lingshui airfield on Hainan,
but the Chinese pilot is killed when his fighter aircraft crashes. A major
international incident occurs as China accuses America of invading national
air space and causing the crash of the fighter. America demands its aircraft
and crew back.
After a satisfactory resolution between China and America, the aircrew are repatriated to America on 11 April, and arrangements for the removal of the Aries III aircraft are made.
3 April
Greece defers the purchase of up to 90 Eurofighter aircraft to pay for
2004 Olympic games.
30 April
The Pentagon appointed panel investigating the V22 Osprey programme publishes
its recommendation that it should not be abandoned, although extensive
redesign and repair work is required to return it to flight. With a disastrous
safety record of 23 deaths in 4 crashes, the fleet had been grounded since
December.