For more than 50 years, the Joint Aircraft Survivability Program (JASP) and its predecessors have worked to enhance combat effectiveness, improve coordination of R&D endeavors, and facilitate technology development and fielding for U.S. air systems. An important part of these efforts is the Aircraft Survivability journal (ASJ), published three times a year and distributed at no charge to practitioners across the industry. JASP invites you to be a part of the ASJ community and stay connected with your colleagues and the latest happenings in the field. It’s free and easy to keep in touch. To read or download the current or a previous ASJ issue, see below. You can also join the ASJ mailing list; request back issues; and/or submit article ideas, abstracts, or News Notes at the links provided.
Fall 2022
4 From the Director’s Desk6 News Notes
9 JCAT Corner
10 Joint Air Threat Model Simulation Validation: Dealing With the Clutter in Rotary-Wing M&S
13 DoD Systems Need Cybersecurity and Cyber Resiliency to Achieve Cyber Survivability
17 The Rapid Structural Vulnerability Toolkit: Enhanced Vulnerability Assessment for Digital Engineering
25 Excellence in Survivability: Robert Lyons
28 WPAFB Test Chambers Reach New Heights in Altitude and Aircrew Research
Summer 2022
4 News Notes7 JCAT Corner
9 Stop the Bullet: Advancing the State of the Art in Spaced Aircraft Armor
15 Pyrophoric Pasta: Promising New Materials and Processes for the IR Battlefield
19 The Chinook Turns 60: A Pilot’s Perspective on the Old ‘Workhorse of the Sky’
26 Evaluating SHiELD as a Cost-Effective Survivability Enhancement for Late-Generation Aircraft
33 JMUM’s 24th Year Brings a Cyber Twist to Survivability M&S Support
Spring 2022
6 JCAT Corner4 News Notes
8 Additive Manufacturing and Ballistic Testing of Next-Generation Honeycomb Structures for Lighter Armor Solutions
15 Survivability Analysis in the Shadow of Apollo: Part II – Spacecraft Charging Vulnerability Near the Stable Earthmoon Lagrange Points
26 Fifty Years of ‘B-R-R-R-R-T’: A Birthday Salute to the Plane too Tough to Die
34 Q&A: The JAS Space on DoDTechipedia