Top News
|Mossad and Israeli Special Forces infiltrate Iran for a secret operation Details of the daring ground operation yet unknown | Kuwaiti defence forces mistakenly shoot down three USAF F 15E Strike Eagle aircraft | All Six Pilots Parachute Safely and are in hospitals for Checks | F 15E is a powerful warjet, has two pilots, one to Fly and the other as a Weapons Officer | Iran meanwhile has widened its missile strikes whiie the US Air Force and Navy have intensified Bombing of Iran | US Def Sec Hegseth says There Are No Timelines BUT IRAN WILL NOT HAVE NUCLEAR CAPABILITY | And that ‘War Will Not Be Endless’ | Trump asks Iranians to ‘Rise up and Take Over Your Government’ | Iran says No Negotiations With US | Trump Confirms Iran’s Supreme Islamic Leader ‘evil’ Ali Khamenei killed in targeted missile strikes | Many Iranian military and Islamic leaders also dead | US and Israel launched the biggest ever military strikes in history to decimate Iran’s top leadership | There are no reported of boots on ground | About 200 USAF and Navy jets are hammering Iran’s political and military targets without stop | The missiles are precision | Care is taken to avoid cities and civilians | It’s War | US and Israel attack Iran | Trump says Will Not Allow to Have Nuclear Bomb | Iran Retaliates with Missiles across Gulf and Jordan | But Not Oman | US Bases in UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, Kuwait Hit | Trump asks Iranians to Remove Evil Regime and Take Over | Trump says US Will Annihilate Iranian Navy | Free Exchange of Missiles and Drones | Iranian Foreign Minister Calls For Stopping Attacks and Then Talks | Iran under Internet Blockade | UK PM says Our Planes in Sky for Defensive Operations | Terror Anywhere Threatens Peace Everywhere: PM Narendra Modi while Addressing Israeli Knesset | PM Modi in Israel, Prime Minister Netanyahu receives him with warm hugs | India clears Grand Mother of All Defence Deals Ever - For $ 40 Billion | Dassault Rafales, Airbus Helicopters, Boeing P 8I, Sikorsky MH 60R, Newer Technology Weapons and Drones Cleared | Modi, Macron announce India-France Strategic Partnership And India-France Year of Innovation | India Finally Decides to Buy 114 Rafale Fighters | Big, Bold Decision by Modi Government | Virtual paralysis in MoD Ends, 35 Years After VP Singh’s Lies Over Bofors | Prime Minister Modi Initiates Many Other Reforms on Defence | Congratulations Mr Modi | Nuclear Talks with US a Good Start, says Iran | Oman will continue to Mediate and host the Talks | India’s Agni-3 Nuclear IRBM Test Successful | India, US Trade Pact May be signed in March, says Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal | US asks Russia and China for a Fresh Nuclear Treaty | India’s Oil Imports from Russia lowest at $2.7 billion in 38 months | RIL buys 2 million barrels of Venezuelan Oil | India fully paid the Committed $120 million to Iran for Chabahar Port development | Project though is uncertain due to US pressure | Police cannot arrest an accused simply to Ask Questions, rules the Supreme Court of India | Adani Defence, Leonardo Aerospace in partnership to make advanced Helicopters in India | Leonardo Aerospace collaborates with Adani Defence to manufacture advanced Helicopters in India | The two companies announced an MoU to set up a ‘fully integrated Helicopter Manufacturing Ecosystem in India’ | ‘Any Attack Will be an All Out War Against Us,’ says Iran | India votes Against a Human Rights motion Censuring Iran in UN | Indian Woman Preeti Unhale Lives for 25 Years With Donor Heart ♥
CIVIL AVIATIONDEFENCE INDUSTRYFarnborough Airshow 2024TECHNOLOGY

GE Aerospace and US Department of Energy Reach Agreement to Expand Supercomputing Capability for Revolutionary New Open Fan Engine Architecture 

  • New Cooperative Research & Development Agreement combines GE Aerospace’s industry-leading technology with the US government’s world-leading supercomputing capabilities to revolutionize the future of flight 

  • Builds on established partnership where GE Aerospace was the first industrial user of Frontier, the world’s fastest supercomputer located at the US Department of Energy Oak Ridge National Laboratory 

FARNBOROUGH, July 21. GE Aerospace and the US Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have reached a new Cooperative Research & Development Agreement (CRADA) on supercomputing, expanding the company’s capabilities to design next-generation aircraft engine technologies like Open Fan. 

With the agreement, announced today at Farnborough International Airshow, GE Aerospace and Oak Ridge will collaborate to develop new, state-of-the-art computational modeling and simulation capabilities. Oak Ridge’s expertise will help aGE Aerospace better manage large simulations, more efficiently extract information, incorporate cutting-edge Artificial Intelligence (AI) tools to improve understanding of results, and streamline the process to visualize the physics.

“Supercomputing and access to Frontier is changing the way we design jet engines, allowing us to solve previously impossible problems. We’re now able to digitally fly components of an Open Fan at full-scale in a simulated environment before the hardware is built,” said Mohamed Ali, Senior Vice President of engineering for GE Aerospace. 

“Our expanded research collaboration through a new cooperative agreement with Oak Ridge National Laboratory will accelerate our engine design and testing, building confidence that Open Fan architecture is the most promising engine technology to help the aviation industry meet its net zero ambitions,” Ali added.

Oak Ridge National Laboratory is home to Frontier, the world’s fastest supercomputer, capable of crunching data at exascale speed, or more than a quintillion calculations per second. It is also renowned for its computing expertise.

“We have some of the world’s most accomplished computer and computational scientists. We are proud to bring them to this research and development agreement with GE Aerospace,” said Gina Tourassi, Associate Laboratory Director for computing and computational sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. 

To model the aerodynamic and acoustic performance of a full-scale Open Fan engine design, GE Aerospace created computational fluid dynamics software capable of running on Frontier.

After an initial simulation in 2023, GE Aerospace now has run additional simulations of improved designs on Frontier that analyze different engine operating conditions to better understand aerodynamic characteristics and acoustic signatures.

GE Aerospace and Safran Aircraft Engines unveiled in 2021 the CFM Revolutionary Innovation for Sustainable Engines (RISE)* program, which encompasses development of a suite of technologies, including advanced engine architectures like the Open Fan, compact core, and hybrid electric systems to be compatible with 100% Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). The goal of the RISE Program is to develop technologies that enable a future engine to achieve at least 20% lower fuel consumption and 20% fewer CO2 emissions compared to today’s most efficient commercial engines.

Through the RISE program, CFM International continues to mature the Open Fan engine architecture, which removes the nacelle for greater propulsive efficiency while achieving the same speed and cabin experience commercial aviation passengers can expect from air travel today. GE Aerospace’s use of supercomputing power and software tools are helping engineers understand Open Fan aerodynamic and acoustic physics in new ways. For example, Frontier unlocks the ability to better evaluate new engine technologies at flight scale in the design phase. As a result, GE Aerospace can improve test hardware designs and better optimize engine performance and airframe integration.

GE Aerospace plans to hire more than 900 engineers in 2024, reflecting its continued focus on innovation to support current aircraft engine programs and develop new technologies for the future of flight. View job openings at invent.ge/engineering.

*RISE is a registered trademark of CFM International, a 50-50 joint company between GE Aerospace and Safran Aircraft Engines.

Related Articles

Back to top button