SimuTech Group Logo

Aerospace Simulation for Flight-Ready Performance

Aerospace development requires accurate prediction of structural loads, thermal behavior, propulsion performance, electromagnetic systems, and impact events. Ansys multiphysics simulation enables engineers to evaluate these coupled physics early, validate designs across real flight environments, and accelerate certification while reducing reliance on costly physical testing.

Talk with an Aerospace simulation consultant

Where We've Helped

MagLev Aero Logo
Logo_IntuitiveMachines
Astroscale Logo
Stork Logo

Still trying to decide?
Here are our most frequently asked questions.

How can simulation help aerospace teams accelerate certification?

Simulation allows aerospace engineers to evaluate structural, thermal, electromagnetic, and impact performance early in the design process. By validating designs digitally before physical testing, teams can identify issues sooner, reduce redesign cycles, and generate the analysis data needed to support certification requirements. This helps programs move from concept to flight qualification faster while reducing the cost and risk of late-stage testing failures.

eVTOL aircraft require tight integration between aerodynamics, electric propulsion, batteries, structures, and avionics. Multiphysics simulation enables engineers to evaluate rotor aerodynamics, electric motor performance, thermal management of batteries and power electronics, and structural loads during flight. By modeling these interactions early, teams developing advanced air mobility platforms can optimize performance, reduce weight, and improve system reliability.

Electric propulsion systems involve motors, inverters, batteries, and cooling systems that must operate reliably under demanding conditions. Simulation helps engineers model electromagnetic motor behavior, thermal loads in power electronics, structural vibration, and system efficiency. This allows teams to improve motor efficiency, manage heat dissipation, and ensure electric propulsion systems meet performance and safety requirements.

Electric aircraft and eVTOL platforms rely on high-power battery systems that must operate safely under demanding flight conditions. Engineers use simulation to evaluate thermal behavior, electrical performance, structural integration, and potential failure scenarios such as thermal runaway. By modeling battery packs, cooling systems, and power electronics early in development, teams can optimize energy density, improve thermal management, and reduce safety risks before physical testing. This helps advanced mobility programs meet strict aerospace safety requirements while accelerating development timelines.

Aerospace testing environments—such as thermal vacuum chambers, crash tests, and anechoic chambers—are extremely costly and time-consuming. High-fidelity simulation allows engineers to evaluate system behavior under extreme conditions before physical prototypes are built. While testing remains essential, simulation significantly reduces the number of prototypes required and helps ensure tests are successful the first time.

Aircraft and spacecraft components experience complex vibration and fatigue loads during launch, flight, and landing. Structural simulation allows engineers to analyze modal behavior, harmonic response, and fatigue life across a range of operating conditions. These insights help teams optimize designs, prevent structural failures, and ensure components meet strict aerospace safety requirements.

Modern aircraft, UAVs, and spacecraft rely on complex RF systems for communication, navigation, and sensing. Electromagnetic simulation allows engineers to evaluate antenna performance, radome effects, electromagnetic interference, and radar cross section before physical testing. This helps ensure mission-critical communication systems operate reliably while minimizing interference between onboard electronics.

Advanced simulation tools allow engineers to model extreme events such as bird strikes, debris impact, crash loads, and blast scenarios. By understanding how materials and structures behave under these nonlinear conditions, teams can improve safety margins, strengthen structural designs, and reduce the need for destructive physical testing during development.