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Future generations of NASA and U.S. Air Force vehicles will require lighter mass while being subjected to higher loads and more extreme service conditions over longer time periods than the present generation. Current approaches for certification, fleet management and sustainment are largely based on statistical distributions of material properties, heuristic design philosophies, physical testing and assumed similitude between testing and operational conditions and will likely be unable to address these extreme requirements. To address the shortcomings of conventional approaches, a fundamental paradigm shift is needed. This paradigm shift, the Digital Twin, integrates ultra-high fidelity simulation with the vehicle s on-board integrated vehicle health management system, maintenance history and all available historical and fleet data to mirror the life of its flying twin and enable unprecedented levels of safety and reliability.
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Edward H. Glaessgen
Langley Research Center
David S. Stargel
United States Air Force Research Laboratory
Langley Research Center
United States Air Force Office of Scientific Research
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Glaessgen et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8e7adcefe13a721ae29b8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2514/6.2012-1818