Nuclear bomber hoax The 1 December 1958 issue of
Aviation Week included an article, "Soviets Flight Testing Nuclear Bomber", that claimed that the Soviets had made great progress in their own nuclear aircraft program. This was accompanied by an editorial on the topic as well. The magazine claimed that the aircraft was real beyond a doubt, stating that "A nuclear-powered bomber is being flight tested in the Soviet Union. ... It has been observed both in flight and on the ground by a wide variety of foreign observers from Communist and non-Communist countries." In reality, however, the article was a hoax. The aircraft in the photographs was later revealed to be an
M-50 bomber and not a nuclear-powered plane at all.
Soviet reusable space shuttle After finding a December 1976
Titan IIID launch was for a secret
KH-11 spy satellite,
Aviation Week & Space Technology editor Craig Covault agreed with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.
David C. Jones to hold on the story, but received details on the
Buran programme which were published on March 20, 1978. It revealed progressively the KeyHole Story after
William Kampiles sold the KH-11 manual to a Soviet spy.
SR-72 (Son of Blackbird) revealing The
SR-72 is the proposed successor to the
SR-71 Blackbird. There were unconfirmed rumors about the SR-72 dating back to 2007, when various sources disclosed that Lockheed Martin was developing a Mach 6 plane for the US Air Force. Such a development was confirmed on 1 November 2013, when the Skunk Works revelations were published about the development work on the SR-72 exclusively in
Aviation Week & Space Technology. The magazine dubbed it 'The Son of Blackbird'. Public attention to the news was large enough to overwhelm the Aviation Week servers.
New, classified unmanned aircraft flying at Area 51 uncovering In a December 9, 2013 cover story,
Aviation Week & Space Technology revealed details about a highly classified intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance stealth unmanned aircraft – the
RQ-180 – that has been developed in secret by Northrop Grumman. The aircraft is currently flying at
Area 51 in the Nevada desert and will become operational by 2015.
Lockheed Martin's secret Compact Fusion Reactor project details In October 2014, Lockheed Martin's Skunk Works research lab gave
Aviation Week editor Guy Norris access to a previously secret initiative to develop a
compact fusion reactor that is small enough to power interplanetary spacecraft, ships and ultimately large aircraft that would virtually never require refueling. If successful, the groundbreaking project could shake up the global energy industry.
Vladimir Putin named Person of the Year On its January 16, 2015 cover,
Aviation Week & Space Technology named Russian President
Vladimir Putin "The Notorious Mr. Putin - Person Of The Year." On its website, the magazine said that "no other person has had a more sweeping impact on aerospace and aviation—for better or worse—than Russian President Vladimir Putin. And for all but the most cynical of observers, Putin's far-reaching impact has definitely been for the worse. Because of this, he is Aviation Week's 2014 Person of the Year." The controversial issue caused a backlash among readers on its comments section and on social media. ==Past editors==