It's been quite a ride! Perhaps no other era in human history has been marked by so many engineering feats as the century we are leaving. In every field of engineering there have been engineering breakthroughs--miracles of the creative technical mind.
Throughout this last year of the 20th century, we'll review some of the truly momentous developments in engineering. Let's start with the aerospace field. Here is a list of some of the breakthroughs that have changed our way of life:
1903, Wright Brothers first sustained flight. That set the stage for much that was to come.
1926, Robert Goddard launches the first liquid-fueled rocket.
1927, Charles Lindbergh completes the first nonstop solo transatlantic flight.
1939, Igor Sikorsky builds and flies the first American-made helicopter.
1947, Chuck Yeager breaks the sound barrier in the Bell X-1 rocket plane.
1957, Russia launches Sputnik.
1958, Boeing puts into commercial service the first U.S.-built commercial jet, the 707.
1961, Yuri Gagarin is the first man in space, in April of that year.
1961, In May, Alan Shepard, Jr. is the first American in space.
1962, John Glenn becomes the first American to orbit the earth. Later that year, Telstar is launched and transmits the first live transatlantic telecasts between Britain and the U.S.
1969, Neil Armstrong is the first man on the moon.
1970, the Concorde supersonic airliner exceeds twice the speed of sound.
1977, Paul MacCready's Gossamer Condor, with bicyclist Bryan Allen at the pedals, is the first craft to fly powered by human muscles.
1983, Pioneer 10 crosses the orbit of Pluto, becoming the first man-made object to leave the solar system.
1986, "Voyager," designed by Burt Rutan and flown by his brother Dick with Jeana Yeager, is the only aircraft to circumnavigate the globe without refueling.
1993, the first vertical launch/vertical landing of a rocket vehicle, the MD DC-X.
1994, the Boeing 777 rolls out, the biggest two-engine jet aircraft.
1998, the international space station begins construction.
No doubt, we've left out a few achievements, but these seem to us to be the major aerospace developments of the last 100 years. What will be the major aerospace breakthroughs in the 21st century?
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Against a backdrop of mounting product complexity and a need to keep a lid on development costs, companies are recognizing a need to make simulation a more integral part of the design process. In response, vendors in the CAD world are building out CAE functionality as part of their CAD suites while simulation vendors are building tighter integrations to leading CAD tools. Keith Meintjes, Ph.D., Practice Manager, Simulation and Analysis at CIMdata, Inc., joins Design News CAD Editor Beth Stackpole in this radio program to explore the new face of integrated CAD and CAE, how companies are benefitting from this tighter partnership between platforms, and how integrating CAE earlier in the development cycle pays off in optimized product designs.
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