Model-Based Engineering: What Is It & How Will It Impact Engineering Simulation?

Date:October 1st, 2019
Location: The Fawcett Center, Columbus, OH (USA)


Overview

Business growth depends on developing new and improved products and technologies, and getting these to market ahead of the competition. The digitalization of our lives today is driving an ever faster-paced environment, and developing products based on skills and capabilities in specific engineering domains is no longer sufficient. The demand for systems-level solutions is driving a need to merge systems engineering and engineering simulation to a new level.

Combining the modeling and simulation perspectives of both systems engineering and engineering simulation can improve communications and coordination across the product development lifecycle. An early reliance on simulation can enable agile approaches in which prototypes and visualizations contribute to elicitation and refinement of expectations and alternatives in collaboration with system stakeholders. Simulation throughout the product lifecycle can reduce risk, more thoroughly explore alternative solutions, and reduce costs over physical testing.

This conference will explore how model-based engineering, along with the challenges that accompany it, will need to be applied within engineering simulation to help address the increasing sophistication of models and tools to predict a wide range of physical phenomena, including how to understand the user domain, to define functions and concepts, and to capture system requirements across the levels of a system architecture.


Description

NAFEMS and participating speakers will cover these topics, and more, at the “Model-Based Engineering: What Is It & How Will It Impact Engineering Simulation?" Conference. Attendees from all industries will gather at this event, in a non-competitive environment, to exchange ideas, identify best practices, and drive the near-future direction of technology.

This conference aims to deliver information and insights on critical topic areas in a manner that maximizes the “take-away” value for attendees. An event agenda and concept championed by several leading figures in industry will provide the opportunity to learn about the latest technologies and practices, which attendees can later share and apply within their own organizations.


Keynote & Invited Presentations

From SysML to Mars: Mars2020’s MBSE Infusion

From SysML to Mars: Mars2020’s MBSE Infusion

Mars2020, NASA’s next Mars Rover inherited a majority of Mars Science Laboratory (MSL)’s Flight hardware and software. It also inherited the technical baseline described in disparate presentations, spreadsheets, document repositories, emails, and intelligent minds that have long left the project. The Mars2020 Systems Engineering leadership wanted to define their technical baseline in an

Systems Modeling and Simulation and its Relation to MBE

Systems Modeling and Simulation and its Relation to MBE

An Overview by the SMSWG Model-based thinking and related approaches are essential in the modern engineering environments to remain competitive. To properly implement these approaches, a fundamental understanding its definition; the composition of the related ecosystem; and the requirements to deploy is necessary. The Systems Modeling and Simulation Working Group (SMSWG) plays the pivotal role


Ohio Supercomputer Center Tour

We are pleased to say that, on Monday, September 30th at 4pm, attendees of this event will have the option to tour the Ohio Supercomputer Center. If you would like to participate in this tour, please note the following:

  • You will need to go through a TSA-style check-in station at the secured building, so no backpacks or weapons, please. For your security badge, you will need to provide a Photo ID (driver’s license or a state ID is fine). You will also be asked to provide your company name.
  • The OSC facility is located about 10 minutes from the Fawcett Center (event venue), and has plenty of free parking available. Please note that you will need to provide your own transportation to the facility.
  • The tour takes about 45-50 minutes, is first-come, first-served, and is free of charge.

If you would like to take the tour, please email americas@nafems.org.

Find out more about the Ohio Supercomputer Center at the following link: www.osc.edu/about/mission

Click here to download more information on the Ohio Supercomputer Center.

Address:

State of Ohio Computer Center
1320 Arthur E Adams Dr.
Columbus, OH, 43221




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