Tag: Aerospace

NASA Initiates Engines Tests on Experimental X-59

Flying Magazine reports, “NASA has fired up the engine of its experimental X-59 supersonic aircraft for the first time, marking the launch of testing to ensure the powerplant and systems work together.” The “X-59 Quiet SuperSonic Technology (QueSST) aircraft is part of NASA’s Low Boom Flight Demonstration project aimed at collecting data to help shape regulations for possible future commercial supersonic flight. … The modified F414-GE-100 engine is expected to enable the aircraft to fly Mach 1.4, or around 925 mph, according to NASA.”
Full Story (Flying Magazine

US Air Force Carries Out Dramatic Nighttime Minuteman III Test

Defense News reports, “Air Force Global Strike Command carried out a test of an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile late Tuesday night. The ICBM, which was equipped with multiple targeted reentry vehicles, launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at about 11 p.m. Pacific time. It then flew about 4,200 miles, at roughly 15,000 miles per hour, to a ballistic missile test site in the Marshall Islands’ Kwajalein Atoll.”
Full Story (Defense News)

 

 

 

Video

US Air Force launches unarmed ICBM (Launch at 0:01 mark)
(VideoFromSpace); YouTube)

AstroForge Prepares for Deep-Space Mission to Mine Asteroid

Mining.com reports, “California-based AstroForge, a pioneer in the field of space mining, is preparing to launch the first fully commercial deep-space mission with the ambitious goal of harvesting precious metals from asteroids. CEO Matt Gialich envisions a future where mining in space alleviates Earth’s resource constraints by tapping into the vast, untapped deposits found on asteroids and other celestial bodies. In a conversation with MINING.COM’s host Devan Murugan, Gialich said that AstroForge’s unique positioning in space will enable the company to achieve profit margins superior to traditional, earth-based mining, largely due to the abundance and purity of space resources.”
Full Story (Mining.com)

RAeS Article: Engineers Weigh in on the Design Freedom of GenAI in Aerospace

Rocket propulsion and other next-gen aerospace systems increasingly depend on GenAI models—a force for democratizing design.

By Greg Zacharias, Aerospace R&D Domain Lead and Executive Producer, AIAA SciTech Forum.

Originally published in the November issue of RAeS AEROSPACE.

From nuclear-thermal rockets to hypersonic aircraft, today’s aerospace systems are increasingly complex, relying on lighter-weight 3D-printed materials, as well as advanced structures, which can include a mix of different materials and thermal-management technologies. The control over form offered by 3D printing means that these components are exceptionally complex, requiring aerospace engineers to develop innovative design approaches. Not surprisingly, some of the most promising approaches tap into generative artificial intelligence, or GenAI, which will be featured at the upcoming 2025 AIAA SciTech Forum in January in Orlando, Florida.

“GenAI is more than just ChatGPT; it has applications in engineering design and it’s going to be used in critical engineering components in the not-so-distant future,” says Zachary Cordero, the Esther and Harold E. Edgerton Associate Professor in MIT’s Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, who will present in two sessions at the forum. GenAI systems leverage vast datasets to autonomously generate novel solutions and designs, enhancing innovation and applications in diverse fields.

“GenAI is extremely powerful if you have a lot of data,” notes Faez Ahmed, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, who leads the MIT Design Computation & Digital Engineering (DeCoDE) Lab in the MIT Center for Computational Science and Engineering (CCSE), an interdisciplinary research and education center focused on innovative methods and applications of computation.

The lack of data for learning models – the oxygen that fuels GenAI training – is the biggest bottleneck, Ahmed adds. “Whenever someone says GenAI doesn’t work, a lot of times it’s not the model; it’s the lack of data.”

The DeCoDE Lab bridges this gap by creating design datasets, often by performing a lot of high-fidelity engineering simulations, including recent work for the automobile industry. The Lab created one of the largest and most comprehensive multimodal datasets for aerodynamic car design named DrivAerNet++, which comprises 8,000 diverse car designs modelled with high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics simulations.

Ahmed emphasises that his MIT team doesn’t always use data from good designs but also develops methods to leverage negative data, since bad designs “are cheap and much easier to get.”


Cordero’s Aerospace Materials and Structures Lab at MIT is pushing the boundaries of additive manufacturing for spaceflight through developing new processes and materials. Cordero is collaborating with Ahmed and MIT Research Scientist Cyril Picard on a US Department of Defense-funded research project on the design of next-generation reusable rocket engines.

According to Picard, the team is using GenAI to assess mechanical and thermal properties of materials to inform the design of 3D-printed multi-material parts, with the “long-term goal of making the engines more high-performing, efficient and lighter.”

Looking across the aerospace sector, GenAI offers many benefits, from optimising materials to reducing costly late-stage design changes when scaling production to enabling rapid validation and qualification, say the researchers.

To Ahmed, the biggest benefit of GenAI goes beyond making better products faster: it affords the time for people to explore new designs while also opening up design to innovators outside of traditional aerospace fields.

“I’m personally really excited about this idea of democratisation of design. Historically, design has been limited to the headquarters of major industries. But with tools, like GenAI, we can tap into the creative potential of people with good ideas, but who aren’t necessarily experts.”

Join MIT and dozens of other worldleading aerospace companies and research institutions at the 2025 AIAA SciTech Forum, 6–10 January 2025, Orlando, Florida. AIAA SciTech Forum is the premier aerospace R&D event of the year that explores the science, technologies and capabilities that are transforming aerospace.

Boeing’s Largest Union Approves New Contract, Ending Lengthy and Costly Strike

The New York Times reports, “Members of Boeing’s largest union approved a new contract on Monday, ending a weekslong strike that was one of the country’s most financially damaging work stoppages in decades. The contract was endorsed by 59 percent of those voting, according to the union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.”
Full Story (New York Times – Subscription Publication)

SpaceX Launches Cargo Dragon Spacecraft on 31st ISS Resupply Mission

Spaceflight Now reports that a SpaceX Cargo Dragon spacecraft launched Monday evening to begin its fifth journey to the International Space Station, carrying with it “more than 6,000 pounds of cargo and science experiments to the orbiting outpost. Liftoff of the Falcon 9 rocket from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) happened at 9:29 p.m. EST “
Full Story (Spaceflight Now)

 

 

 

Video

SpaceX Falcon 9 Launches Cargo Dragon from Kennedy Space Center (Launch at 1:31:11 mark)
(Spaceflight Now); YouTube)

A400M Operators Set to Receive New Upgrades, Support Package

Aviation Week reports, “Airbus’ A400M airlifter is set to receive a series of upgrades as part of a new agreement between the launch customer nations. The upgrades package, called Block Upgrade 0, will update the turboprop-engine transport aircraft’s flight management systems, ensure the wider fleets are compliant with NATO requirements, and improve the aircraft’s communications capabilities.”
Full Story (Aviation Week)