
Photo credit: Spirit AeroSystems
The development of hypersonic flight systems, though around for decades, is now a top defense priority in the United States, bringing the field into a rapid state of growth and change. Being a unique, multi-disciplinary field, the challenge is sourcing experts who possess the necessary skill sets to promote its growth. However, when there aren’t enough experts, it creates innovation gaps, such as keeping design for manufacturability (DFM) top-of-mind at the R&D stage, translating to manufacturing gaps later on when it’s too late to make cost-efficient changes.
Consortiums, such as the newly established University Consortium for Applied Hypersonics (UCAH), provide an important setting for cultivating the talent needed to advance the field. Students can collaborate directly with university researchers and industry professionals to develop technologies and advance crucial hypersonics research.
Read the full article now!
Consortiums, such as the newly established University Consortium for Applied Hypersonics (UCAH), provide an important setting for cultivating the talent needed to advance the field. Students can collaborate directly with university researchers and industry professionals to develop technologies and advance crucial hypersonics research.
Read the full article now!
Latest from Aerospace Manufacturing and Design
- Taiwan’s China Airlines orders Boeing 777X passenger, freighter jets
- Reamer re-tipping extends life of legacy tooling
- Revitalizing the Defense Maritime Industrial Base with Blue Forge Alliance
- Safran Defense & Space opens US defense HQ
- Two miniature absolute encoders join US Digital’s lineup
- Lockheed Martin completes Orion for Artemis II
- Cylinder CMMs for complex symmetrical workpieces
- University of Oklahoma research fuels UAS development