The pause before takeoff is not hesitation, but a critical moment of engine verification and thrust stabilization.
Morning Overview on MSN
World-first supercomputer finds invisible jet engine flaw humans missed
Researchers using the Frontier supercomputer at Oak Ridge National Laboratory have identified aerothermal flaws in jet engine turbine blades that conventional simulation methods could not detect. The ...
In a long-running collaboration with GE Aerospace, researchers at the University of Melbourne in Australia have been steadily ...
Supercomputers are capable of a mind-boggling number of calculations and one of them just found a flaw in a piece of technology that is used around the world.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Scientists have used one of the world's most powerful supercomputers to find out how microscopic damage to turbine blades ...
Companies are converting aircraft engines to land-based natural gas turbines for power generation in the AI boom.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
GE Aerospace teaches robots human skills to repair jet engines, ease backlog
A technician who once shaped jet engine parts by hand is now helping train ...
The development of a new turboelectric jet engine is set to transform air travel by enabling affordable supersonic flights, potentially cutting travel time from San Francisco to Tokyo to just three ...
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