R1: Ansys Products 2022
: Autonomous vehicle developers used Ansys Speos to simulate exactly how a car’s LIDAR sensors would "see" through a blinding rainstorm, ensuring safety without needing to drive millions of physical miles in dangerous conditions. The Legacy of Integration
With the 2022 R1 release, Sarah utilized the enhanced GPU solver. What used to take a week on a massive server cluster now took overnight on a single high-end workstation. She could see how the heat moved through the battery cells in real-time, allowing her to iterate on the cooling system five times faster than her competitors. Bridging the Physical and Digital ANSYS Products 2022 R1
: A wind farm operator in the North Sea used these tools to predict a bearing failure three weeks before it happened, saving millions in emergency repairs. : Autonomous vehicle developers used Ansys Speos to
The story of 2022 R1 is also the story of the . Engineers began using Ansys Twin Builder to create virtual replicas of machines already out in the field. She could see how the heat moved through
Imagine a lead engineer, Sarah, tasked with designing a next-generation electric vehicle (EV) battery. In the past, she would have to run her thermal models in one silo and her structural crash tests in another. Communication between these departments was slow, and errors often slipped through the cracks.
For decades, engineers faced a persistent wall: the "Simulation Gap." Designing a product—whether a hypersonic jet or a microscopic medical implant—required massive computing power and weeks of waiting for results. By the time the simulation finished, the design was often already outdated.