Aerospace products and the processes by which they are made are complex in nature, and knowledge of the latter is important to an understanding of the industry. A substantial investment in research, involving specialized personnel and facilities, is critical to the aerospace industry, as it is to most industries in which development and productivity play highly important roles. Subsequent product development and the transition of new technologies through design and testing to production also involve numerous processes and practices, many dependent on sophisticated equipment and facilities. The absolute size of the products themselves demands massive structures to house their assembly and, in the case of space launchers, can require the construction of immense support equipment.
Investment sources for these processes derive from government financing on a pay-as-needed basis for military and other national projects or from capital raised by equity financing—either by public or risk-sharing private investors or by loans from normal venture sources such as banks and insurance companies. As the cost of large air transports has increased to the hundreds of millions of dollars, leasing has become an effective conserver of cash flow for airlines, and the leasing companies have become the source of procurement funds for the contractors. Consistent with the high level of total funds required and with the risk in cost and market, shared investment among suppliers and prime contractors over the entire life of a program has become a more frequent practice as well.
Research
The world’s aerospace industry undertakes research and development alone and in conjunction with governmental agencies and academia. The ultimate aim of the effort is the creation of flight vehicles more advanced than their predecessors. Because of the complexity—i.e., the “systems” nature—of the industry’s end products, advancements commonly require improvements across many technological disciplines.
Aerospace research and development comprises three main activities. Basic research involves investigations that may have no application in existing systems but provide advancement of knowledge for its potential. Applied research is the investigative effort aimed at direct applications. Development, by definition, is the use of scientific knowledge directed toward the production of useful materials, devices, systems or methods, including design and development of prototypes and processes; it is the translation into hardware and software of the results of applied research. The primary focus in the aerospace industry is on applied research and development related to the introduction and improvement of products.
Since applied research is absolutely vital to the competitiveness of the industry, it is often supported by governments. In the United States, funds are commonly provided by agencies such as NASA and the military service laboratories that work directly with the country’s industry. In Europe and the rest of the world, governments most often provide financial support for research directly to their countries’ industry. The multinational European Space Agency maintains ESTEC, the European Space Research and Technology Centre, in Noordwijk, Netherlands. ESTEC is the technical development interface between European industry and the scientific community. It oversees the development of spacecraft, and it has its own technological laboratories and extensive facilities for testing spacecraft and components under simulated launch and in-space conditions. Britain, Sweden, and France also support notable government laboratories.
Reducing the weight of aircraft structures has always been a focus of research. In addition to ongoing research into composite materials, investigation of aluminum-lithium and other alloys continues to foster advances in metals. Materials research for supersonic and hypersonic vehicles focuses on both high-temperature polymers and lightweight metals as well as high-temperature polymer-matrix composites, adhesives, sealants, light alloys, and metal-matrix composites for structural applications (see materials science: Materials for aerospace).
To improve the all-weather operation of commercial aircraft, enhanced vision systems using video and infrared cameras or millimetre-wave radar are being pursued. Other areas of research include fly-by-light techniques that transmit commands through fibre-optic cables rather than electrically. The demand for longer vehicle lifetimes has made vital the development of nondestructive evaluation techniques to measure quality states and estimate the remaining lifetimes of structures.
In the military sector, research studies focus on means to enhance the maneuverability and survivability of flight vehicles. Combat survivability is defined as the capability of an aircraft to avoid or withstand a hostile environment, and related research centres on threat warning, signal jamming, radar deception, reduction of infrared signatures, threat suppression, redundancy and protection of components, passive and active damage suppression, and shielding.
Since the first spacecraft were launched, the size and weight of satellites and probes have increased constantly, as have costs. Much of spacecraft research is focused on reversing this trend by miniaturizing instruments, propulsion systems, power sources, and other components and developing small spacecraft that can replace larger systems. Important research directions include vehicle autonomy, microelectronic and microelectromechanical systems, ion engines, modular architecture and multifunctional systems, and high-efficiency solar arrays that replace silicon cells with significantly more effective photovoltaic materials such as gallium arsenide.
Product development and testing
Initiation of the product development process differs between the military and commercial sectors. In the United States the defense services normally provide detailed mission specifications for desired products, against which contractors submit proposals as part of a competitive process. Proposals are reviewed, and one or more development contractors are selected. In some cases contracts are awarded solely for the development of competitive prototypes. The company or team of companies that develops the winning design then may receive a full-scale development and production contract.
In the civil aircraft sector, manufacturers conduct detailed market studies to determine the need for new vehicle designs, then define specifications, announce to potential customers their intention to develop the new product, and solicit orders. When sufficient firm orders are obtained—from the so-called launching customers—the program is officially initiated. The customers’ engineers generally work together with the manufacturers to influence the final design to fit specific needs.