Monday, June 22, 2026

AFRL "Flyer" — Deep Dive:


Aerospace & Defense
· Supercomputing · 22 June 2026 — Technical Follow-On

Who Built It, What's Inside, Where It Stands Against China, and How the Machine Gets Shared

Four questions the ribbon-cutting left unanswered: the contractor and chip supply chain behind TI-23; Flyer's true rank in the global supercomputer order—including China's secret exascale machines; what 8.7 petaflops actually buys for hypersonic aerothermal simulation; and the bureaucratic and technical machinery that decides which research teams get core-hours and when.

BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front

Penguin Solutions (a subsidiary of Smart Global Holdings, formerly Penguin Computing) is the most likely integrator of the TI-23 Flyer and Raven systems, having won the $68 million DoD HPCMP contract in September 2021 for exactly two platforms at AFRL and Navy DSRCs. NVIDIA GPU accelerators are confirmed; AMD CPUs are the precedent architecture. Globally, Flyer's 8.7 petaflops places it far outside the top 100 publicly ranked machines — yet China's most capable systems (Tianhe-3 "Xingyi" at ~1.3 exaflops sustained and Sunway OceanLight at comparable scale) are deliberately withheld from TOP500 rankings, complicating direct comparison. For hypersonic CFD, Flyer's GPU-dense architecture targets turbulence-transition physics and aerothermal coupled-field problems that previously required months of wall-clock time on older AFRL clusters; individual simulation campaigns that consumed six months on predecessor hardware have been cut to three weeks. Project access is governed by a five-tier allocation hierarchy — from standard batch through Frontier multi-year dedicated-priority campaigns — scheduled via Slurm under fair-share priority rules that weight urgency, project tier, and historical utilization.

I. Who Built Flyer? The Prime Contractor and Supply Chain

AFRL has not publicly named the integrator of TI-23 at the June 2026 ribbon-cutting — a routine omission for DoD procurement, where vendor identity and system architecture below the top-level headline figures are often withheld on acquisition sensitivity grounds. However, the public record is sufficiently specific to identify the most probable prime with high confidence.

In September 2021, the DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program awarded Penguin Computing — now operating as Penguin Solutions, a subsidiary of Smart Global Holdings (SGH) — two contracts collectively valued at $68 million. Those contracts called for delivery of Penguin TrueHPC supercomputing platforms, plus managed services and high-performance storage, to exactly two sites: the Air Force Research Laboratory DSRC and the Navy DSRC. The award predates the formal TI-23 program designation, but the number and location of the contracted systems precisely matches the TI-23 Flyer (AFRL, unclassified) and TI-23 Raven (AFRL, classified) pair. Penguin's own president, Sid Mair, confirmed at contract award that the platforms would be used for "the highly complex problems the user community is tasked with solving" and cited AMD and NVIDIA partnerships as the enabling semiconductor relationship.

TI-23 Probable Supply Chain — Based on Public Procurement Record

  • System Integrator (Prime)
    • Penguin Solutions
    • Subsidiary of Smart Global Holdings (SGH); formerly Penguin Computing. Winner of $68M DoD HPCMP contract (Sep 2021) for two TrueHPC platforms at AFRL and Navy DSRCs. Penguin has offered HPC solutions since 1998; acquired by SGH (Cayman Islands-based) for $85M in 2019.
  • GPU Accelerator (Confirmed)
    • NVIDIA Corporation
    • NVIDIA GPU model unspecified at ribbon-cutting. Brig. Gen. Wickert cited "NVIDIA chips and GPUs" explicitly. Penguin's TrueHPC platforms for DoD have used NVIDIA H100 or A100-class datacenter GPUs in recent configurations. Export-controlled; not available to Chinese or sanctioned entities.
  • CPU (Precedent Architecture)
    • AMD
    • Raider (TI-21, the immediately preceding AFRL system) used AMD CPUs + NVIDIA GPUs per 2022 AFRL DSRC disclosure. The TI-23 architecture is unconfirmed at the CPU level; AMD EPYC is standard in Penguin TrueHPC configurations. TI-23 may also follow the full AMD + NVIDIA GPU-accelerated pattern used in El Capitan and Frontier.
  • High-Performance Storage
    • Likely DDN or equivalent
    • 18 PB storage capacity confirmed. Previous AFRL DSRC generations (HPE SGI 8600 era) used DDN Lustre parallel storage; Penguin TrueHPC configurations typically offer DDN or IBM Spectrum Scale. Specific vendor not publicly disclosed for TI-23.
  • Interconnect Fabric
    • InfiniBand (likely) or HPE Slingshot
    • Not publicly disclosed. Raider used Penguin's integrated fabric. At 186,000 processors, a high-bandwidth low-latency interconnect (NDR InfiniBand at 400 Gbit/s per port, or HPE Slingshot) is required to prevent I/O bottlenecks in coupled-field hypersonic simulations.
  • Network Backbone (DREN)
    • Verizon
    • DREN 4, the DoD Research and Engineering Network connecting all five DSRCs, is operated under a commercial services contract awarded to Verizon in 2021. Supports 1–100 Gbit/s data transfer; IPv6-native with IPv4 compatibility. More than 210 DoD sites connected.
  • Managed Services
    • Penguin Solutions
    • Included in 2021 contract. Bryon Foster (AFRL DSRC director) confirmed 24/7/365 operational commitment; Penguin's managed services team provides system administration, user support, and continuous operation assurance for DoD HPCMP centers.

One earlier generation of AFRL DSRC systems — a set of four SGI 8600 clusters commissioned before the Raider era — was supplied by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) and powered by 24-core Intel Xeon Scalable processors with Intel Omni-Path fabric and DDN Lustre storage at 12 petabytes per system. That HPE/Intel architecture has given way to the AMD CPU + NVIDIA GPU architecture across recent DoD HPCMP insertions, consistent with the broader industry migration toward heterogeneous compute for mixed HPC/AI workloads. Flyer's NVIDIA GPU content is the clearest signal of this architectural shift: the same class of datacenter GPU that trains large language models at scale is now the core computational substrate for aerothermal shock physics at the Air Force Research Laboratory.

II. Where Flyer Stands in the Global Supercomputer Order

Benchmarked at 8.7 petaflops, Flyer does not approach the upper tier of the current global TOP500. As of the June 2025 TOP500 list, the entry threshold (rank 500) stood at 2.57 petaflops — meaning Flyer would rank somewhere in the vicinity of the 200th to 250th position worldwide, a mid-table placement. The three leading U.S. Department of Energy machines occupy a different computational order of magnitude entirely: El Capitan at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory tops the list at 1,742 petaflops (1.742 exaflops), Frontier at Oak Ridge at 1,353 petaflops, and Aurora at Argonne at 1,012 petaflops. Europe's JUPITER system at Forschungszentrum Jülich in Germany, inaugurated in September 2025, became the continent's first exascale-class system at 1,000 petaflops.

Global Supercomputer Landscape — Selected Systems, June 2026
System Country / Operator Peak (Rmax) Architecture TOP500 Rank Primary Mission
El Capitan USA / LLNL 1,742 PFlop/s HPE Cray EX, AMD EPYC + MI300A #1 Nuclear stockpile stewardship
Frontier USA / ORNL 1,353 PFlop/s HPE Cray EX235a, AMD EPYC + MI250X #2 DOE open science
Aurora USA / Argonne NL 1,012 PFlop/s HPE Cray EX, Intel Max Series #3 AI + science
JUPITER Booster Germany / FZ Jülich ~1,000 PFlop/s NVIDIA GH200 (Grace Hopper) #4 European research
Tianhe-3 "Xingyi" China / NUDT Tianjin ~1,300–1,700 PFlop/s (est.) Phytium CPUs + Matrix-3000 (domestic) Not submitted Defense/AI — classified
Sunway OceanLight China / NSC Wuxi ~1,000+ PFlop/s (est.) Sunway Microelectronics (domestic) Not submitted Ocean modeling / defense
Sunway TaihuLight China / NSC Wuxi 93 PFlop/s Domestic SW26010 manycore #24 (Nov 2025) General research
Flyer (TI-23) USA / AFRL WPAFB 8.7 PFlop/s Penguin TrueHPC, NVIDIA GPUs, AMD CPUs (prob.) ~200–250 (est.) Defense RDT&E (unclassified)
Raven (TI-23) USA / AFRL WPAFB ~5–6 PFlop/s (est.) Penguin TrueHPC (classified config.) Not submitted Defense RDT&E (classified)
Raider (TI-21) USA / AFRL WPAFB 12 PFlop/s Penguin, AMD + NVIDIA ~50 (at commission, 2023) Defense RDT&E (predecessor)

* Flyer's TOP500 rank is an estimate; AFRL DSRC systems are not routinely submitted to the TOP500 list. Raven specifications are estimated from the combined 14 PFlop/s target minus Flyer's 8.7 PFlop/s. Chinese exascale figures reflect unverified intelligence community and open-source assessments; neither system has been formally benchmarked on HPL. Sources: TOP500.org, Data Center Dynamics, Tom's Hardware, Wikipedia, NextPlatform.

The China comparison requires careful handling. On the public TOP500 list, China's highest-ranked submission as of November 2025 is the 2016-vintage Sunway TaihuLight at 93 petaflops — ranking 24th, more than ten times slower than Flyer's own predecessor, Raider. This number is almost universally acknowledged in the HPC community as a profound underrepresentation of China's actual computational capability. Since 2017, Chinese institutions have progressively withdrawn new systems from TOP500 submissions, offering Gordon Bell Prize competition papers as the primary evidence of continued development instead.

By most credible open-source estimates, China operates at least two exascale-class systems. Tianhe-3 (nicknamed "Xingyi"), developed by the National University of Defense Technology and housed at the National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, has been estimated at approximately 1.3 exaflops sustained (1.7 exaflops peak) on HPL-equivalent benchmarks — performance that would place it between Frontier and El Capitan if submitted to TOP500. The Sunway OceanLight at the National Supercomputing Center in Wuxi is estimated at comparable throughput. A third exascale-class system, allegedly built by China's Sugon (now operating under U.S. entity-list restrictions that blocked its access to AMD Hygon CPUs) and housed at the Shenzhen supercomputing center, has an uncertain status. China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology stated in mid-2024 that China's aggregate installed computing capacity across all systems had reached approximately 230 exaflops of theoretical peak — a figure that, taken at face value, represents aggregate capacity of the entire government, commercial, and research sectors, not individual machine peak performance.

"China's OceanLight system … at least seems to aspire to exaflop-sized performance — albeit one that remains inscrutable to international standards." NextPlatform, February 2024, citing HPC community analysis

The geopolitical dimension of this opacity is significant: U.S. export controls imposed since 2019 have systematically denied China access to advanced NVIDIA H100 and A100 GPUs — the same accelerators almost certainly powering Flyer — and have restricted Huawei and Sugon from U.S.-origin technology. China's response has been to develop indigenous alternatives, including Huawei's Ascend series and domestic interconnect fabrics, at considerable cost in both money and performance parity. The Tianhe-3 and OceanLight systems are built on entirely domestic silicon from Phytium (CPUs) and Sunway Microelectronics respectively — a deliberate supply-chain independence that trades performance efficiency for invulnerability to U.S. sanctions. From AFRL's operational standpoint, the direct performance comparison is less strategically relevant than the access-and-security envelope: Flyer operates within a classified-adjacent, export-controlled, security-vetted infrastructure that no Chinese entity can access, while Chinese defense supercomputing operates in a comparable walled garden that U.S. researchers cannot reach.

III. What 8.7 Petaflops Actually Buys for Hypersonic CFD

The engineering claim that matters most for AFRL's mission is not where Flyer ranks on TOP500 but what it enables in hypersonic research that predecessor systems could not accomplish on acceptable timescales. The physics problem is instructive.

A hypersonic vehicle traveling at Mach 5 or above generates a shock-layer environment in which the flow chemistry, heat transfer, and boundary-layer dynamics are tightly coupled across multiple physical phenomena: high-temperature gas dissociation and ionization, turbulent boundary-layer transition (which determines transition from laminar to turbulent heat flux — a factor of three to seven in heating rate), ablation and oxidation of thermal protection materials, and plasma sheath formation that attenuates radio-frequency communications. Each of these phenomena operates on different length and time scales, and their accurate coupled representation requires fine spatial resolution that scales computational cost as roughly the cube of the linear resolution factor. Halving the grid spacing in all three dimensions multiplies computational cost by approximately eight. Running to higher Mach numbers, longer bodies, or more complex geometries compounds this further.

AFRL's own documentation for its predecessor Raider system (TI-21) illustrated the practical consequence: a Navy simulation project that previously required six months of continuous compute time on the available DSRC hardware was cut to three weeks on Raider's 12-petaflop architecture — a factor of roughly eight in elapsed time. The Flyer-Raven TI-23 combination offers approximately 1.17 times Raider's total performance in direct petaflop terms (14 combined versus 12), but GPU-accelerated HPC does not scale linearly with headline petaflop count for all workload types. The key enabler is the NVIDIA GPU's performance on the specific linear algebra kernels that dominate CFD solvers: sparse matrix-vector products, fast Fourier transforms for spectral methods, and the iterative linear solvers (GMRES, multigrid) that consume most clock cycles in Reynolds-Averaged Navier-Stokes (RANS) and Large Eddy Simulation (LES) codes.

AFRL's computational aeroscience community uses several DoD HPCMP-maintained and community-developed codes for hypersonic work: Kestrel (the HPCMP CREATE Air Vehicles code), OVERFLOW (NASA/AFRL), and US3D (University of Minnesota, developed under AFRL-funded research). These codes have been progressively GPU-ported over the past five years, and all three benefit directly from Flyer's NVIDIA GPU density. Purdue University's AFRL-sponsored hypersonic turbulence research — which uses HPCMP computing allocations to design passive surface treatments for boundary-layer transition delay — provides a concrete example: computational simulation campaigns design the surface geometry, physical tunnel tests at AFRL's Mach 6 Ludwieg tube validate the results, and the agreement between prediction and experiment determines whether the next simulation campaign is warranted. The HPCMP Frontier ceramics program extended this paradigm to materials discovery, predicting approximately 900 candidate thermal protection compounds — a screening campaign that would have been physically infeasible through bench synthesis.

At 8.7 petaflops with GPU acceleration, Flyer enables LES campaigns on full-vehicle hypersonic geometries that were previously limited to reduced-geometry or 2D-symmetric configurations on RANS solvers at lower fidelity. The practical implication: aerothermal predictions at the nose cap, control surface junction, and inlet throat of a hypersonic glide vehicle can now be run in high-fidelity LES in days rather than months, enabling design-space exploration that was previously incompatible with acquisition program timelines.

IV. Operations: How Projects Are Scheduled and Prioritized

An Engineers Guide to Scheduling a CFD job on Flyer. Flyer does not operate as a dedicated single-purpose machine for any one research program. Like all HPCMP DSRC systems, it is a shared national resource serving hundreds of concurrent projects across the services, agencies, and sponsored civilian and contractor researchers. The allocation and scheduling architecture that governs who gets core-hours, when, and at what priority is a two-layer system: a resource allocation governance layer that determines how many core-hours each project receives per fiscal year, and a job scheduling layer that determines when allocated compute jobs actually run.

At the governance layer, the HPCMP's Resource Management team collects and manages computational requirements through the Portal to the Information Environment (pIE), coordinated with Service/Agency Approval Authorities (S/AAA) — the branch-level gatekeepers who validate that a proposed project aligns with DoD mission priorities and that the requesting organization has appropriate clearances and DoD sponsorship. All users must have a DoD government scientist or engineer as a sponsor; principal investigators may be from government, industry, or academia. The S/AAA approval is required before any core-hour allocation is granted.

Projects are allocated resources in five general tiers, each with distinct proposal requirements, priority treatment in the scheduler, and compute quantum available:

● URGENT
Urgent Projects
DoD HPCMP-designated. Bypass normal queue ordering; immediate resource claim. Reserved for time-critical operational or acquisition crises where delay constitutes unacceptable mission risk. Requires HPCMP Director-level approval.
● HIGH PRIORITY
High Priority Projects
Pre-authorized elevated queue access. Jobs in the "high" Slurm queue jump ahead of standard allocations. Typically reserved for acquisition program milestones, test and evaluation support, or Congressional-directed priorities.
● FRONTIER
Frontier Projects
Multi-year commitments of exceptional compute allocations — resources that would not be achievable through standard channels. Competitive proposal process, reviewed by the High Performance Computing Advisory Panel (HPCAP). Eligible PIs include government, industry, and academia with DoD sponsor. Dedicated Slurm queue partition.
● AE PROGRAM
Acquisition Engineering
Dedicated track for acquisition engineering, mission engineering, and T&E workflows tied to DoD programs of record. Access to compute resources, DREN network access, and specialized modeling/simulation software tools (CREATE suite). Managed separately from S&T allocations.
● STANDARD
Standard Allocations
The baseline tier. Annual core-hour allocations via S/AAA approval. Jobs submitted to standard, large, background, or debug Slurm partitions with fair-share scheduling. Background queue allows low-priority opportunistic jobs (up to 10 concurrent per user); debug queue is limited to short verification runs.

At the job scheduling layer, Flyer (and Raider before it) uses the Slurm Workload Manager — the same scheduler that powers more than 60 percent of TOP500 systems globally, including the Tianhe-2 in China. Slurm manages the assignment of specific compute nodes to queued jobs based on resource availability, time limits, and priority scores. Priority is computed from a combination of factors: project allocation tier (Urgent/High/Frontier jobs receive favorable treatment), fair-share weighting (teams that have recently consumed large fractions of their allocation receive lower instantaneous priority to equalize system access over time), job size and wall-clock time limits, and queue-specific policies set by AFRL DSRC system administrators.

The HPCMP additionally offers Dedicated Support Partitions (DSPs) — reserved node sets held for specific programs that require guaranteed turnaround, analogous to a dedicated laboratory instrument that cannot be preempted by other users. DSPs are a premium resource available only to programs that have justified the need for guaranteed access windows, such as large-scale time-sensitive test support campaigns where computational results must be available before a physical test event proceeds.

For Frontier-class projects — the largest and most computationally demanding campaigns — the proposal process is formally competitive. Proposals are reviewed by the High Performance Computing Advisory Panel (HPCAP), a board of senior DoD computational science and engineering experts, and must demonstrate both scientific or engineering rigor and a clear connection to DoD acquisition or S&T mission outcomes. Multi-year commitments are evaluated at annual Intermediate Program Reviews (IPRs), and continued funding is contingent on demonstrated progress. The HPCMP Institute program, a parallel track, funds software development efforts that produce deployable tools for the wider HPCMP user community — CREATE-class codes and similar deliverables — and imposes the same IPR discipline with weekly activity reports and monthly financial reporting.

"Sometimes even before the system is running, we're ordering the next one. These systems are so large, and it takes so much to build them, get them in the building and up and running that there is a continual process." Bryon Foster, Director, AFRL DoD Supercomputing Resource Center (2023, discussing the TI-23 procurement)

The operational rhythm that results is one of perpetual queuing under a priority framework that mirrors the broader DoD funding hierarchy: programs of record with acquisition milestones get AE or High queue access; large multi-year S&T campaigns compete for Frontier status; smaller research efforts and academic partners operate in the standard tier under fair-share rules that prevent any single group from monopolizing the system. The 24/7/365 operational commitment means Flyer's 186,000 processors are never intentionally idle — unused cycles are consumed by lower-priority background queue jobs rather than allowed to go to waste. Over a projected five-year service life, this continuous-utilization model underpins the $800 million lifetime savings figure: every hour of simulation delivered is an hour of physical testing avoided.

V. The Supply Chain Vulnerability Underneath Flyer's Capability

A final dimension of Flyer's significance that received no attention at the ribbon-cutting but is implicit in its architecture: the entire system depends on NVIDIA GPU silicon that is manufactured, at leading edge, at TSMC in Taiwan — and is now subject to the same export control architecture that restricts Chinese access to that same silicon. The U.S. maintains its lead in deployable GPU-accelerated supercomputing precisely because NVIDIA H100 and successor chips cannot be legally exported to China, and because China's domestic accelerator industry (Huawei Ascend, Biren, Cambricon) has not yet closed the performance gap at scale. AFRL's Flyer is therefore simultaneously a national defense capability and a proof point in an ongoing industrial policy contest: the U.S. bet that maintaining NVIDIA export restrictions and investing in domestic GPU-dense HPC infrastructure compounds American advantage in simulation-based weapons development faster than China can build comparable capability from domestically produced silicon.

Whether that bet holds depends on China's pace of domestic semiconductor development — a question that has as much bearing on AFRL's next supercomputer procurement as any doctrinal priority or budget line. From Wright-Patterson's secure facility on Area B, Flyer's NVIDIA GPU nodes run a race that began not in Dayton but in the foundry halls of Hsinchu and the national supercomputing centers of Tianjin and Wuxi.

Verified Sources & Citations

  1. "Penguin Computing Awarded $68M to Provide HPC Capabilities to DoD." HPCwire, 14 September 2021.
    https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/penguin-computing-awarded-68m-to-provide-hpc-capabilities-to-dod/
  2. "DoD Awards $68M Contract to Penguin Computing for Two Supercomputers." Data Center Dynamics, 15 September 2021.
    https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/dod-awards-68m-contract-to-penguin-computing-for-two-supercomputers/
  3. "Air Force Research Lab Adds 12PFLOPS HPC System." Inside HPC & AI News, 25 September 2023.
    https://insidehpc.com/2023/09/air-force-research-lab-adds-12pflops-penguin-hpc-system/
  4. "HPE to Deliver Seven Supercomputers to Department of Defense." TOP500.org.
    https://www.top500.org/news/hpe-to-deliver-seven-supercomputers-to-department-of-defense/
  5. "TOP500 List — June 2025." TOP500.org, June 2025.
    https://top500.org/lists/top500/list/2025/06/
  6. "TOP500." Wikipedia, updated May 2026. (Aggregate country performance figures; El Capitan, Frontier, Aurora rankings.)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOP500
  7. Balci, Mete. "State of Supercomputers Around the World in 2026." metebalci.com, May 2026. (Four exascale systems; JUPITER; Chinese non-submissions.)
    https://metebalci.com/blog/state-of-supercomputers-around-the-world-in-2026/
  8. Sanchez, Christopher. "State of Global AI Compute (2025 Edition)." sanchez.vc GeoCoded Special Report, August 2025. (US 6.696 EFlop/s aggregate; Chinese capacity claims; Epoch AI/Georgetown data.)
    https://www.sanchez.vc/geocoded-special-reports/state-of-global-ai-compute-2025-edition
  9. "China Publishes List of Its Most Powerful Supercomputers, with No Exascale Systems to Be Found." Data Center Dynamics, May 2026. (487.94 PFlop/s top Chinese public system; 63 TOP500 submissions.)
    https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/china-publishes-list-of-its-most-powerful-supercomputers-with-no-exascale-systems-to-be-found/
  10. Hruska, Joel. "China May Have Unmatched Supercomputer Abilities, Third Exascale Machine Apparently Online." Tom's Hardware, September 2023. (OceanLight, Tianhe-3 "Xingyi," Sugon/Shenzhen status.)
    https://www.tomshardware.com/news/industry-expert-chinas-supercomputer-might-may-be-unmatched
  11. "Two Chinese Supercomputers Break Exascale Barrier." Tom's Hardware, October 2021. (Tianhe-3/Phytium + Matrix-3000; OceanLight/Sunway Microelectronics architecture.)
    https://www.tomshardware.com/news/two-chinese-exascale-supercomputers
  12. "The Mystery of Tianhe-3, The World's Fastest Supercomputer, Solved?" NextPlatform, February 2024. (Architectural analysis of Xingyi; comparison to El Capitan.)
    https://www.nextplatform.com/2024/02/09/the-mystery-of-tianhe-3-the-worlds-fastest-supercomputer-solved/
  13. "More Details Slip Out About China's Two Secret Exascale Supercomputers." Data Center Dynamics, November 2021. (Tianhe-3: 1.3 exaflops HPL sustained, 1.7 peak.)
    https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/more-details-slip-out-about-chinas-two-secret-exascale-supercomputers-third-may-be-delayed/
  14. "Supercomputing in China." Wikipedia, updated June 2026. (Exascale systems; TOP500 withdrawal; domestic silicon.)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supercomputing_in_China
  15. "Exascale Computing." Wikipedia, updated June 2026. (Tianhe-3 and OceanLight operational as of 2023; JUPITER 2025.)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exascale_computing
  16. Choi, Charles Q. "Top500: Frontier Still No. 1. Where's China?" IEEE Spectrum. (OceanLight citation; Chinese HPC opacity analysis.)
    https://spectrum.ieee.org/frontier-exascale-top500-export-controls
  17. DoD HPCMP Resource Management. "Resource Management — Allocation Processes." hpc.mil. (pIE portal; S/AAA approval; Frontier and DSP programs.)
    https://www.hpc.mil/solution-areas/resource-management
  18. DoD HPCMP. "Call for FY 2025 DoD Frontier Project Proposals." hpc.mil. (Frontier eligibility, purpose, multi-year commitment structure.)
    https://www.hpc.mil/calls/call-for-fy-2025-dod-frontier-project-proposals
  19. DoD HPCMP. "Call for DoD HPCMP Acquisition Engineering Project Requests." hpc.mil. (AE program structure, lifecycle phase coverage.)
    https://hpc.mil/calls/call-for-dod-hpcmp-acquisition-engineering-project-requests
  20. "Raider Slurm Guide." centers.hpc.mil / AFRL DSRC, updated April 2026. (Slurm queues: urgent, high, frontier, standard, large, background, debug; queue limits and priority rules.)
    https://centers.hpc.mil/users/docs/afrl/raiderSlurmGuide.html
  21. AFRL Regional Network / Air Force Tech Connect. "Supercomputer Allocation Enables Purdue Hypersonic Research." Air Force Tech Connect, February 2024. (Mach 6 Ludwieg tube; turbulence transition; HPCMP allocation enabling validation experiments.)
    https://airforcetechconnect.org/news/supercomputer-allocation-enables-purdue-hypersonic-research
  22. DoD HPCMP. "Call for FY23 DoD HPCMP Institute Proposals." hpc.mil. (Institute structure; weekly/monthly/annual reporting; IPR milestones; software deliverable requirements.)
    https://www.hpc.mil/calls/call-for-fy23-dod-hpcmp-institute-proposals

AFRL's "Flyer" Supercomputer:


Aerospace & Defense
· Supercomputing · 22 June 2026

8.7 Petaflops Bring Hypersonics, AI, and Next-Generation Aircraft Design into a New Computational Era

The Air Force Research Laboratory has commissioned a $20 million, NVIDIA GPU-powered machine at Wright-Patterson AFB that its builders say collapses five centuries of laptop-equivalent computation into a single day—marking the latest step in the DoD's rolling modernization of defense high-performance computing.

BLUF — Bottom Line Up Front

On 18 June 2026, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) commissioned "Flyer," a $20 million supercomputer at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. Designated TI-23, the system delivers 8.7 petaflops of computational throughput through 186,000 processors and 800 terabytes of RAM, supported by 18 petabytes of storage and powered by NVIDIA GPUs. It is projected to operate continuously for five years and to save the Department of Defense more than $800 million in testing and acquisition costs over its service life. Together with its companion classified system "Raven," already operational, the two machines are projected to provide a combined 14 petaflops for the Air Force's DoD Supercomputing Resource Center—the largest such center in the Air Force. Target applications include hypersonic vehicle aerothermal modeling, AI/machine learning workload acceleration, and digital-engineering simulations of next-generation aircraft systems.

On the 18th of June 2026, Air Force Research Laboratory officials gathered in a secure building on Wright-Patterson Air Force Base's Area B for a ribbon-cutting ceremony that, in their telling, echoed a ceremony performed 122 years earlier a few miles away. That earlier moment involved Orville and Wilbur Wright and a canvas-and-spruce glider. This one involved rack upon rack of NVIDIA-accelerated processing nodes, a machine they named in deliberate homage to the Wrights' Flyer of 1903—and which they say can accomplish in 24 hours what would require approximately 500 years of continuous computation on a modern consumer laptop.

The new system, officially designated TI-23 and christened "Flyer," represents AFRL's latest technology insertion under the Department of Defense High Performance Computing Modernization Program (DoD HPCMP), a congressionally directed program in continuous operation since 1992. The $20 million machine joins nine other supercomputers already resident at Wright-Patterson, which hosts the largest Air Force DoD Supercomputing Resource Center (DSRC) of the program's five centers nationwide.

System Architecture and Throughput

AFRL officials have disclosed the top-level configuration of Flyer: 186,000 processing cores, 800 terabytes of random-access memory, and 18 petabytes of storage capacity, all accelerated by NVIDIA graphics processing units whose specific model designations were not publicly disclosed at the ribbon-cutting. Benchmarked peak throughput is reported at 8.7 petaflops—that is, 8.7 quadrillion floating-point operations per second. To contextualize that number: if every human being on Earth performed one arithmetic operation every second without pause, it would take the planet's entire population roughly four years to equal what Flyer computes in a single second.

Flyer's 800-terabyte RAM pool is equivalent, by AFRL's own metric, to the working memory required to outfit two million conventional laptops simultaneously. Storage capacity is expressed by the laboratory in more cinematic terms: 3.6 billion photographs, or 46 years of high-definition video. The system will operate continuously—24 hours a day, 365 days a year—for at least five years. Bryon Foster, director of AFRL's DoD Supercomputing Resource Center, has projected that the $20 million capital cost will yield more than $800 million in savings to the Department over Flyer's operational lifetime, chiefly by displacing expensive physical testing with validated high-fidelity simulation.

"All of this will be dedicated to solving problems—difficult problems—for the Department of War." Bryon Foster, Director, AFRL DoD Supercomputing Resource Center, 18 June 2026

Flyer operates as an unclassified resource. Its companion system, "Raven"—also designated TI-23—handles classified workloads and was commissioned ahead of Flyer's public rollout; an AFRL spokeswoman confirmed Raven has been operational for some time. Together, the two TI-23 machines are projected to deliver a combined 14 petaflops of computational capability, supporting both open and controlled research environments within AFRL's mission space.

The DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program Context

Flyer is not an isolated procurement but the latest increment in a deliberately rolling modernization strategy that AFRL has operated for more than three decades. The DoD HPCMP, managed through the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology, maintains five DSRCs—at Wright-Patterson (Air Force), Aberdeen Proving Ground (Army Research Laboratory), Stennis Space Center (Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command), Vicksburg, Miss. (Army Engineer Research and Development Center), and Maui, Hawaii (Maui High Performance Computing Center). The centers share computational resources across the Air Force, Army, Navy, and affiliated DoD organizations, including sponsored contractors, civilian researchers, and academic partners.

Kelly Dalton, director of the DoD High Performance Computing Program, described the procurement philosophy at the ribbon-cutting: the center operates on a continuous insertion cycle in which each system's procurement often overlaps with the commissioning of its predecessor. "Sometimes even before the system is running, we're ordering the next one," Foster had noted in an earlier interview, characterizing a planning cadence driven by the scale and lead time of large HPC procurements. Dalton drew a direct line from the Wright Brothers to the current investment, noting that Orville and Wilbur built a six-foot wind tunnel in their west Dayton bicycle shop to systematize aerodynamic experimentation—an early form of computational substitution for costly trial-and-error. "The brothers then conducted systematic, rigorous laboratory experiments on hundreds of airfoils, translating raw empirical data into precise mathematical equations," Dalton said. "They computed lift, drag, and thrust."

Predecessor Systems and the AFRL HPC Lineage

AFRL's supercomputing lineage at Wright-Patterson follows a naming tradition drawn from aviation history. Flyer's immediate predecessor in the unclassified tier was Raider—designated TI-21 in honor of the Doolittle Raiders of World War II—commissioned in September 2023. Raider, built by Penguin Systems and powered by AMD CPUs paired with NVIDIA GPUs, delivered approximately 12 petaflops and briefly ranked in the vicinity of the fiftieth most powerful system on the TOP500 list. Its own predecessor, Thunder, installed in 2015, produced 3.1 petaflops—less than one thirty-sixth of the performance projected from the combined Flyer-Raven TI-23 pairing.

  • 2015 Thunder commissioned — 3.1 petaflops; AMD/NVIDIA hardware.
  •  2019 AFRL unveils first-ever shared classified DoD HPC capability at WPAFB, comprising Mustang (unclassified), Voodoo, Shadow, and Spectre (classified tiers).
  •  2023 Sep Raider (TI-21) commissioned — ~12 petaflops; Penguin Systems, AMD CPUs + NVIDIA GPUs; accelerated a Navy simulation project from six months to three weeks.
  •  2023 Q4 AFRL orders TI-23 Flyer and TI-23 Raven, targeting combined 14 petaflops; Raven (classified) begins installation and testing.
  •  2026 Jun Flyer (TI-23, unclassified) commissioned at WPAFB Area B ribbon-cutting ceremony — 8.7 petaflops, 186,000 processors, 800 TB RAM, 18 PB storage, NVIDIA GPUs; Raven already operational.

The acceleration trajectory is instructive from a systems-engineering standpoint: AFRL has achieved roughly a 4.5-fold improvement in peak throughput from Raider to Flyer across a three-year cycle, consistent with the broader industry trend of GPU-accelerated supercomputing scaling faster than Moore's Law predictions for CPU-only clusters. The shift from CPU-dominant to GPU-dominant architectures, already evident in Raider's design and now fully realized in Flyer's NVIDIA-centric configuration, reflects the same architectural pivot that has driven commercial AI infrastructure investment at hyperscaler scale.

Mission Applications: Hypersonics, AI, and Digital Engineering

The primary mission drivers for Flyer span three intersecting domains of current Air Force priority: hypersonic weapons development, artificial intelligence and machine learning infrastructure, and next-generation aircraft digital engineering. Each represents a category of computational workload that exceeds the practical capacity of earlier AFRL systems and, in some cases, cannot be meaningfully addressed through physical testing at all.

Hypersonic vehicle modeling is particularly demanding. Aircraft traveling at speeds exceeding Mach 5 generate aerothermal environments—shock-induced heating, plasma sheath formation, turbulent boundary layer transitions—whose physics are nonlinear and tightly coupled across fluid dynamics, thermochemistry, and material response timescales. Ground-based testing in hypersonic wind tunnels, such as AFRL's own Mach 6 Ludwieg tube facility at Dayton, provides short-duration burst data on the order of 100 milliseconds per run, severely limiting the scope of design parameter exploration. Computational fluid dynamics codes running on HPC resources extend that exploration space by orders of magnitude. AFRL has previously noted that hypersonic vehicles "travel too fast to test on a range"—a constraint that elevates computational simulation from a supplementary tool to the primary design environment for critical performance envelope regions. The HPCMP's Frontier program has separately funded computational ceramics research aimed at identifying thermal protection materials capable of surviving hypersonic aerothermal loads, predicting approximately 900 candidate compounds in a single computational campaign that would have been impractical through laboratory synthesis alone.

AI and machine learning workloads represent the second major demand driver. AFRL's Digital Capabilities Directorate has articulated compute capacity as the foundational substrate of the laboratory's digital transformation strategy. Brig. Gen. Douglas "Beaker" Wickert, AFRL's commanding general, spoke in those terms at the commissioning ceremony: "The 21st century is the century of data. It's the century of information, and the capabilities—the NVIDIA chips and the GPUs that Flyer is going to bring—are going to allow us to invent the future." Large-scale AI training runs and inference workloads for autonomous systems, sensor fusion, electronic warfare signal processing, and logistics optimization all benefit directly from GPU-dense HPC configurations, and AFRL researchers have access to Flyer's resources through the same allocation mechanisms used by the broader DoD community.

"The Wright brothers did not just build an airplane. They calculated their way into the sky." Kelly Dalton, Director, DoD High Performance Computing Program, 18 June 2026

Digital engineering for next-generation aircraft—the third pillar of Flyer's stated mission—encompasses high-fidelity aerodynamic simulation, structural analysis, propulsion integration modeling, and electromagnetic compatibility prediction across platform concepts that may never be physically prototyped at intermediate design stages. The DoD HPCMP's CREATE software suite, developed specifically for defense acquisition CFD and computational electromagnetics, runs on AFRL's DSRCs. Historically, the same modeling and simulation paradigm accelerated a Navy project from six months to three weeks on the Raider platform; AFRL officials project proportional or greater gains on Flyer's 8.7-petaflop architecture.

Cost-Benefit Architecture: Simulation as Test-Cost Offset

The $800 million lifetime savings figure cited by program director Dalton warrants engineering-level scrutiny. The HPCMP's value argument rests on a well-established cost-offset model: replacing physical hardware-in-the-loop testing, range instrumentation, and experimental hardware fabrication with validated simulation reduces total acquisition cost and accelerates program schedules. The model has documented precedents. At the system level, computational design exploration compresses the design space before hardware commitment, reducing expensive late-cycle engineering changes. At the material level, as illustrated by the HPCMP Frontier ceramics program, HPC allows prediction and down-selection among thousands of candidate compounds, reserving physical synthesis for a much smaller validated set.

The 40-to-1 savings ratio implied by $20 million in capital cost against $800 million in projected savings is aggressive but not unprecedented in DoD HPC program documentation. It reflects the cumulative value of simulation hours provided across multiple programs and multiple services over a five-year service life, rather than a single-program test-replacement calculation. Independent verification of that figure is not available in public sources; it is an AFRL/HPCMP program estimate presented at the commissioning event.

Infrastructure, Access, and Security Architecture

Flyer occupies a secure facility on Wright-Patterson's Area B and operates within the Defense Research and Engineering Network (DREN), the DoD's dedicated high-speed wide-area network connecting the five DSRCs and more than 210 DoD sites including research laboratories, test centers, universities, and industrial facilities. DREN's fourth-generation infrastructure, provisioned under a commercial services contract awarded to Verizon in 2021, delivers data transfer rates from 1 Gbit/s to 100 Gbit/s and operates as an IPv6 network with legacy IPv4 support.

Access to Flyer is not restricted to uniformed Air Force personnel. As with the other AFRL DSRC systems, the resource is available to DoD-sponsored contractors, civilian researchers, military users from all services, and academic investigators operating under a valid DoD sponsor relationship. The HPCMP manages allocation through a competitive proposal review process, with dedicated allocation tracks including the Frontier Project program for large-scale computationally intensive research. The complementary Raven system handles classified workloads under the same HPCMP umbrella but with access governed by cleared-facility and need-to-know restrictions appropriate to its classification tier.

In May 2025, the HPCMP further expanded its compute ecosystem by authorizing InfiniteTactics' Analytics Gateway platform—known as AWS-Gate—to operate as a hybrid HPC-as-a-service layer bridging DSRC on-premises resources and AWS GovCloud capacity. That authority-to-operate approval formally extended HPCMP-managed resources into commercial cloud infrastructure for the first time, allowing burst capacity for AI/ML workloads that periodically exceed on-premises queue bandwidth. Flyer operates within this hybrid ecosystem as the on-premises anchor of unclassified compute, with AWS-Gate providing elastic overflow.

Congressional Context and the Department of War Rebranding

Representative Mike Turner (R-Dayton), a senior member of the House Armed Services Committee, attended the ribbon-cutting and framed the investment in explicitly competitive terms: "This is the next level of what's going to occur right here for the men and women who serve in the Air Force and what they'll be doing here for the Air Force Research Laboratories." Turner's district has a direct institutional stake in AFRL's continued presence and investment: Wright-Patterson AFB is one of the largest employers in the Dayton metropolitan area, and AFRL's DoD DSRC anchors a regional defense technology ecosystem spanning Tier 1 and Tier 2 defense contractors, academic research partners, and small-business technology developers.

Several officials at the ceremony made use of the newly redesignated "Department of War" styling—a rebranding of the Department of Defense that has appeared in budget and organizational documentation in the current administration. Foster stated directly that Flyer's resources "will be dedicated to solving problems, difficult problems, for the Department of War." Dalton invoked the same designation in projecting Flyer's operational schedule. The nomenclature shift carries no programmatic consequence for HPCMP operations, which remain governed by the same statutory framework under the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology.

Significance in the Global HPC Landscape

At 8.7 petaflops, Flyer is a capable but not record-setting system by the standards of the global TOP500 supercomputer list; its immediate AFRL predecessor, Raider, ranked approximately fiftieth on the TOP500 at commissioning in 2023. The world's most powerful system, Frontier at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, operates at roughly 1,200 petaflops (1.2 exaflops). Flyer's strategic value lies not in raw top-list ranking but in its security-enveloped availability for defense-specific workloads that cannot be run on commercially accessible systems, its connection to DREN's low-latency classified-adjacent network infrastructure, and its integration with DoD-specific computational software frameworks—including the HPCMP CREATE suite for aerodynamic and electromagnetic simulation—that are maintained and optimized specifically for defense acquisition engineering.

The HPCMP's broader pivot toward AI and machine learning—formalized in a 2024 User Group Meeting and dedicated AI/ML workshop at the Doolittle Institute in Niceville, Florida—positions Flyer as part of a deliberate infrastructure build intended to support autonomous systems research, advanced signal processing, and decision-support AI across the services. That strategic alignment with the National Defense Strategy's AI/ML priority areas gives the Flyer commissioning significance beyond the raw petaflop count, as GPU-dense HPC infrastructure is the enabling substrate for large-scale model training and high-fidelity simulation-based reinforcement learning for autonomous vehicle and weapon system development.

Looking Forward

AFRL's documented procurement cycle—in which a successor system's acquisition often begins before its predecessor achieves full operational capability—suggests that planning for TI-25 or equivalent next-generation systems is likely already underway, consistent with Foster's earlier observation that the lead time for large HPC acquisitions demands overlapping procurement horizons. The trajectory from Thunder's 3.1 petaflops in 2015 to the combined 14-petaflop TI-23 pair in 2026 represents an approximately 4.5-fold improvement per generation over three generations—a cadence that, if sustained, would place AFRL's next DSRC system in the exaflop-class range by the early 2030s, coincident with the projected initial operational capability windows for several next-generation Air Force platform programs including the Next Generation Air Dominance family of systems.

Whether that projection holds will depend on GPU architecture roadmaps, DoD budget trajectories, and the degree to which hybrid cloud integration via HPCMP's AWS-Gate architecture alleviates pressure on discrete hardware insertions. For now, Flyer represents the latest proof point in a continuous computational arms race that the Air Force Research Laboratory has been running—largely out of public view—since the Wright Brothers first made the Miami Valley a proving ground for powered flight.

Verified Sources & Citations

  1. Gnau, Thomas. "AFRL Computing Power Soars at Wright-Patterson with $20M 'Flyer' Supercomputer." Dayton Daily News, 18 June 2026.
    https://www.daytondailynews.com/local/business/afrl-computing-power-soars-at-wright-patterson-with-20m-flyer-supercomputer/article_c06159f3-0856-5719-8080-aadfadd5cbaf.html
  2. Gnau, Thomas. "AFRL Computing Power Soars at Wright-Patt with $20M 'Flyer' Supercomputer." Springfield News-Sun, 21 June 2026.
    https://www.springfieldnewssun.com/local/afrl-computing-power-soars-at-wright-patt-with-20m-flyer-supercomputer/article_27b88078-c94c-5f3d-bf2e-82886067df0c.html
  3. WKEF/Dayton 24Now. "New Supercomputer at Wright-Patterson AFB Hits 8.7 Quadrillion Calculations per Second." Dayton 24/7 Now, 19 June 2026.
    https://dayton247now.com/news/local/new-supercomputer-at-wright-patterson-afb-hits-87-quadrillion-calculations-per-second
  4. Bridgeman, Kylie. "Air Force Unveils New $20M Supercomputer, Taking Tech to Next Level." WHIO-TV News Center 7, 18 June 2026.
    https://www.whio.com/news/local/air-force-unveils-new-20m-supercomputer-taking-tech-next-level/DYJ6BGZYRFDEHCWA6L7UATT57Q/
  5. Air Force Research Laboratory Public Affairs. "AFRL's Newest Supercomputer 'Raider' Promises to Compute Years' Worth of Data in Days, Saving Time, Money." AFRL.af.mil, 20 September 2023.
    https://www.afrl.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/3521947/afrls-newest-supercomputer-raider-promises-to-compute-years-worth-of-data-in-da/
  6. Feldman, Michael. "Air Force Research Lab Adds 12PFLOPS Penguin HPC System." Inside HPC & AI News, 25 September 2023.
    https://insidehpc.com/2023/09/air-force-research-lab-adds-12pflops-penguin-hpc-system/
  7. "Air Force Research Lab Unveils Newest Supercomputer, 'Raider,' with 12 PetaFLOPS Capacity." HPCwire, 20 September 2023.
    https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/air-force-research-lab-unveils-newest-supercomputer-raider-with-12-petaflops-capacity/
  8. Garner, Kerry. "US Air Force Research Laboratory Gets 12 Petaflops Supercomputer." Data Center Dynamics, 18 September 2023.
    https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/news/us-air-force-research-laboratory-gets-new-12-petaflops-supercomputer/
  9. "New U.S. Air Force Supercomputer Can Compute Years' Worth of Data in Days." Defense Mirror, 16 September 2023.
    https://defensemirror.com/news/35016/New_U_S__Air_Force_Supercomputer_Can_Compute_Years____Worth_of_Data_in_Days
  10. Air Force Research Laboratory Public Affairs. "AFRL Introduces New Sharable Supercomputing Capability for Classified Research." Wright-Patterson AFB News, 5 March 2019.
    https://www.wpafb.af.mil/News/Article-Display/Article/1774556/afrl-introduces-new-sharable-supercomputing-capability-for-classified-research/
  11. Corrigan, Jack. "DOD Gets First Shared Supercomputers for Classified Research." FedScoop, 8 March 2019.
    https://fedscoop.com/supercomputer-dod-shared-wright-patterson/
  12. DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program. "About DoD HPCMP." ORISE/ORAU program portal.
    https://orise.orau.gov/hpcmp/about-dod-hpcmp.html
  13. "High Performance Computing Modernization Program." Wikipedia, updated May 2026.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Performance_Computing_Modernization_Program
  14. "ATO Approved: InfiniteTactics Extends DoD's HPC Modernization Program to the Cloud." Inside HPC & AI News, 6 May 2025.
    https://insidehpc.com/2025/05/ato-approved-infinitetactics-extends-dods-hpc-modernization-program-to-the-cloud/
  15. AFRL Regional Network / Air Force Tech Connect. "Supercomputer Allocation Enables Purdue Hypersonic Research." Air Force Tech Connect, 13 February 2024.
    https://airforcetechconnect.org/news/supercomputer-allocation-enables-purdue-hypersonic-research
  16. DoD HPCMP. "Engaging the DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program (HPCMP)." Birds-of-a-Feather session, SC19 Supercomputing Conference, 2019.
    https://sc19.supercomputing.org/proceedings/bof/bof_pages/bof145.html
  17. DoD High Performance Computing Modernization Program. Official program portal. hpc.mil.
    https://www.hpc.mil/

 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

The Blanket Problem: General Atomics to Design First Full-Scale Fusion Blanket Test Facility


General Atomics to Design First Full-Scale Fusion Blanket Test Facility | General Atomics

Energy & Power ▸ Fusion
Fusion Energy ▸ Infrastructure

How One San Diego Facility Could Unlock Commercial Fusion

General Atomics and the U.S. Department of Energy have launched design work on the world's first full-scale fusion blanket test facility—targeting the critical engineering bottleneck that plasma physics alone cannot solve.

Bottom Line Up Front

General Atomics (GA), the Idaho National Laboratory (INL), Kyoto Fusioneering, and UC San Diego are designing a Fusion Blanket Component Test Facility (BCTF)—the first dedicated facility to test full-scale lithium-bearing breeding blankets at power-plant conditions. Seeded by the U.S. Department of Energy and leveraging the existing infrastructure of GA's Magnet Technologies Center in Poway, California, the BCTF directly addresses the tritium self-sufficiency challenge that must be solved before any fusion pilot plant can operate without an external fuel supply. It is the highest-profile infrastructure announcement yet to emerge from California's rapidly consolidating fusion ecosystem, underwritten by state law, $806 million in federal FY2026 fusion appropriations, and more than $2.2 billion in cumulative public and private investment in the state since 2021.

Physics has, in a meaningful sense, already won the argument for fusion. The National Ignition Facility demonstrated scientific net gain in 2022. ITER, the international tokamak under construction in Cadarache, France, will achieve Q>10 plasma conditions by the mid-2030s. Private-sector startups have raised more than $10 billion globally, and the U.S. Department of Energy's Fusion Energy Sciences (FES) program is operating at an FY2026 appropriation of $806 million.[1,2] But the hardest unsolved problem in fusion engineering is not plasma confinement. It is the breeding blanket.

On 11 June 2026, General Atomics announced that it is collaborating with the DOE, INL, Kyoto Fusioneering, and UC San Diego to develop design concepts for a Fusion Blanket Component Test Facility (BCTF)—the world's first installation purpose-built to evaluate fully integrated blanket systems at power-plant scale, without the neutron flux of a live fusion plasma.[3] The announcement represents a qualitative step change: moving from blanket-module bench testing at reduced scale toward the kind of integrated, full-geometry thermal-hydraulic and tritium-extraction validation that commercial plant licensing will ultimately require.

Why Blankets Are the Hard Part

A fusion reactor burning deuterium-tritium (D-T) fuel generates most of its energy not as heat in the plasma, but as kinetic energy carried by 14.1 MeV neutrons—particles electrically neutral and therefore impervious to the magnetic fields that confine the plasma. The breeding blanket is the engineered shell that intercepts those neutrons, converts their energy to extractable heat, and—critically—breeds new tritium fuel by bombarding lithium nuclei.

This last function is existential for the commercial fusion economy. Tritium does not occur naturally in significant quantities; it decays with a half-life of 12.3 years, and current global production from CANDU-type heavy water reactors is orders of magnitude too small to fuel a commercial-scale fusion sector.[4] Every D-T power plant must, in steady state, breed at least as much tritium as it burns—a metric called the Tritium Breeding Ratio (TBR), which must exceed approximately 1.05 to account for radioactive decay losses, extraction inefficiencies, and inventory held in the fuel cycle.[5]

Tritium Breeding Ratio — Selected Blanket Design Concepts (Illustrative)
Minimum viable
≥1.05
W-Re-HfC / Li-6 concept
(STEP Programme, 2024)
0.135
SiC / Pb-Li concept
(STEP Programme, 2024)
0.048
Target commercial plant
>1.10
Note: Values for the STEP spherical tokamak geometry reflect the geometric constraint of reduced inboard breeding area inherent to compact reactors. Commercial tokamaks with more blanket "real estate" are expected to achieve higher global TBR. The gap between current experimental results and the commercial minimum illustrates why a dedicated full-scale test facility is considered critical infrastructure.

Achieving a commercially viable TBR requires simultaneous optimization of blanket geometry, lithium-6 enrichment, neutron multiplier materials (typically beryllium or lead), coolant routing, and structural integrity under intense neutron irradiation. The options include solid lithium ceramic pebble beds, liquid lithium, and molten lithium-lead or lithium-fluoride salt mixtures—each with distinct thermal-hydraulic behavior, tritium permeation characteristics, and materials compatibility challenges. No design has yet been validated at the scale and integration level demanded by a real power plant.[6]

"No one has tested a fusion blanket at this scale. While there are more research and development challenges ahead, a BCTF brings us closer to turning fusion from proven science into practical, sustainable power."

— Dr. Anantha Krishnan, SVP, General Atomics Energy Group

What the BCTF Will—and Will Not—Do

The BCTF as currently conceived is a non-nuclear test stand: it will circulate blanket working fluids at full power-plant heat fluxes and flow rates, and validate tritium extraction at power-plant scale, but will not expose blanket modules to the intense neutron flux of a live plasma. That irradiation-phase testing will eventually require a dedicated neutron source—most likely a fusion-relevant device such as the International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility (IFMIF-DONES) under construction in Spain, or future D-T experimental reactors.[3,6]

What the BCTF can do is substantial. Engineers plan to confirm that circulating blanket fluids can effectively remove heat at power-plant levels; that materials and joints can withstand the mechanical stresses imposed by thermal cycling; that tritium can be extracted from lithium streams at commercially relevant rates; and that the integrated system behaves as simulation codes predict. These are exactly the unknowns that have historically caused fusion's "always thirty years away" problem—not insufficient plasma physics, but insufficient engineering data on the systems surrounding the plasma.

BCTF Facility Concept — Key Parameters (Preconceptual Phase)
Lead organizationGeneral Atomics (prime); Idaho National Laboratory (DOE lead)
PartnersKyoto Fusioneering, UC San Diego, industry/academia TBD
Proposed siteGA Magnet Technologies Center, Poway, California
Blanket fluid typesSolid, liquid, and molten-salt lithium-based systems
Test scaleFull power-plant geometry (first such facility globally)
Primary parametersHeat removal, mechanical stress, tritium extraction efficiency
Neutron testingNot in scope (requires separate irradiation facility)
Current phasePreconceptual design (DOE seed funding to INL)
Construction decisionContingent on design-phase results

Infrastructure Leverage: The Magnet Technologies Center

The proposed BCTF site is not a greenfield project. GA's Magnet Technologies Center in Poway, California spent fifteen years as the manufacturing home of the ITER Central Solenoid—the world's largest pulsed superconducting magnet, standing nearly 60 feet tall and weighing 1,000 tons, wound from niobium-tin superconducting cable and designed to induce 15 megaamperes of plasma current.[7,8] All six production modules were completed and shipped to the ITER site in France by mid-2025, with US ITER completing final electrical connection deliveries in April 2026.[9]

That project took 15 years and required building out precision cryogenic manufacturing infrastructure, advanced metrology capability, and a domestic supply chain capable of handling the largest, heaviest, and most precise components in the history of fusion engineering.[10] The BCTF proposal intends to exploit that existing infrastructure—high-bay floor space, crane capacity, precision tooling, and an experienced workforce—rather than construct from scratch. This could compress timelines meaningfully if the project advances to full construction authorization.

The International Dimension: Kyoto Fusioneering

The inclusion of Kyoto Fusioneering (KF) as a BCTF partner brings a company with arguably the deepest commercial blanket engineering portfolio outside of national laboratories. KF's UNITY program encompasses two integrated test facilities: UNITY-1 in Japan, which entered full operation in early 2026 for experimental validation of blanket and thermal cycle components, and UNITY-2 in Canada, developed through a joint venture with Canadian Nuclear Laboratories—Fusion Fuel Cycles Inc.—which received a tritium license and began operations preparation in 2026.[11,12]

KF had already established a strategic partnership with DOE and Oak Ridge National Laboratory in January 2026, with a specific focus on breeding blanket systems.[13] In February 2026, KF's UK subsidiary was awarded a contract by UKIFS (UK Industrial Fusion Solutions) to develop an advanced manufacturing demonstrator for future blanket concepts, in collaboration with Alloyed Ltd and TWI Ltd.[14] The company's involvement in the BCTF consortium therefore reflects a coherent international network of blanket R&D rather than a token partnership.

The Global Race for Blanket Validation

The U.S. is not alone in recognizing that blanket validation is the critical path item. ITER itself will host four Test Blanket Module (TBM) concepts from different ITER parties, with a Preliminary Design Review for the European TBMs planned for 2026.[6] China's fusion engineering test reactor (CFETR) program is explicitly designed as a tritium self-sufficiency demonstration device, bridging between ITER and a commercial power plant. The IAEA convened its first Technical Meeting on Tritium Breeding Blankets and Associated Neutronics in September 2025, reflecting global recognition that blanket qualification has moved from a long-range research question to a near-term engineering program.[15]

CSIS analysts warned in April 2026 that China is investing at more than double the U.S. annual public rate in fusion and has comprehensive deployment infrastructure already under construction, potentially closing the gap between scientific achievement and commercial reality faster than U.S. policy currently assumes.[16] The Fusion Industry Association has called for a one-time $5 billion supplemental appropriation to accelerate U.S. program execution and fund shared infrastructure—precisely the category the BCTF represents.[17]

California's Fusion Industrial Policy

The BCTF announcement lands against a backdrop of deliberate California state policy to anchor the fusion industry in the state. Senate Bill 80 (Caballero, Chapter 334, Statutes of 2025), signed by Governor Newsom and enacted with nearly unanimous bipartisan support in both chambers, established the Fusion Research and Development Innovation Initiative within the California Energy Commission (CEC), with initial appropriations of $5 million for grants to advance fusion science and technology.[18,19] The bill's stated goal is to develop a fusion energy pilot program in California by the 2040s, and the CEC held an implementation workshop in April 2026 to identify research priorities and funding opportunities.[20]

Companion legislation—Senate Concurrent Resolution 25, setting an ambitious goal of siting a pilot fusion plant in California, and SB 96, extending sales tax exemptions to fusion energy companies—reinforced the policy framework.[21] A study released by the San Diego Regional Economic Development Council found that California hosts more than one-third of all U.S.-based fusion companies and has attracted over $2.2 billion in cumulative public and private investment since tracking began in 2021. The study estimated potential economic impact of between $48 billion and $125 billion depending on commercialization timelines.[22]

"Fusion is having its Silicon Valley moment. What happens in the next three to five years will decide whether California owns the industry or watches it leave."

— Prof. Mike Campbell, UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering

General Atomics is the anchor of this ecosystem. The company has operated the DIII-D National Fusion Facility—the nation's largest magnetic-fusion user facility—on behalf of DOE since the 1980s. San Diego also hosts the Fusion Data Science and Digital Engineering Center, major academic programs at UCSD and SDSU, and a growing network of private-sector and government collaborators that includes Commonwealth Fusion Systems, TAE Technologies, and others with California footprints.

What Comes Next

The BCTF is presently in preconceptual design, with DOE seed funding channeled through INL to establish the collaboration structure and begin scoping. A positive outcome from the design phase would position the project for a formal construction authorization request—a process that, for a first-of-kind national facility, will require significant additional federal investment beyond the seed funding, Congressional support, and environmental permitting. No cost estimate, schedule, or specific power level for the facility has been publicly released as of the announcement date.

Meanwhile, the broader DOE fusion commercialization architecture continues to develop. FY2026 FES appropriations of $806 million include $134 million announced in September 2025 for FIRE Collaboratives and INFUSE awards; the Milestone-Based Fusion Development Program, with $415 million authorized through FY2027, continues to provide federal cost-share to eight companies developing pilot plant pre-conceptual designs; and the newly established Office of Fusion within DOE is still clarifying its organizational relationship with the Office of Science and FES.[1,2,23]

What is clear is that the plasma-confinement challenge and the blanket-engineering challenge must be solved in parallel, not in sequence. Every fusion company with a commercial timeline in the 2030s needs validated blanket technology. A shared national facility that reduces that risk for the entire sector—public and private alike—is exactly the kind of infrastructure that neither any single private company nor DOE's basic-research programs can efficiently provide alone. If the BCTF advances to construction, it may prove to be as consequential for fusion's commercial prospects as the Central Solenoid was for demonstrating that the United States can deliver fusion hardware on a global scale.

Verified Sources & Citations

  1. [1] Congressional Research Service. "Toward Commercial Fusion Energy: Considerations for Congress." R48866. 27 Feb 2026. https://www.congress.gov/crs-product/R48866
  2. [2] U.S. Department of Energy. "Energy Department Announces $134 Million to Advance U.S. Fusion Leadership Through Targeted Research." 11 Sept 2025. https://www.energy.gov/articles/energy-department-announces-134-million-advance-us-fusion-leadership-through-targeted
  3. [3] General Atomics. "General Atomics to Design First Full-Scale Fusion Blanket Test Facility." Press release, 11 June 2026. https://www.ga.com/ga-to-design-first-full-scale-fusion-blanket-test-facility; also via Business Wire: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260611766698/en/
  4. [4] International Atomic Energy Agency. "Tritium Breeding." IAEA Nuclear Knowledge Management. https://nucleus.iaea.org/sites/connect/FUSEpublic/SitePages/Tritium-Breeding.aspx
  5. [5] USPTO Patent 11,869,677. "Breeder Blanket for Nuclear Fusion Reactor." (Application PCT/EP2021/082283, priority Nov 2020.) Discusses TBR >1.05 minimum for viable breeding systems. https://image-ppubs.uspto.gov/dirsearch-public/print/downloadPdf/11869677
  6. [6] Fusion for Energy (F4E). "International Teamwork Paves the Way for ITER Test Blanket Modules." 11 Sept 2025. https://fusionforenergy.europa.eu/news/tbm-design-review-collaboration-europe-korea-iter/
  7. [7] General Atomics. "General Atomics Marks Completion of the World's Largest and Most Powerful Pulsed Superconducting Magnet for Fusion Energy." 28 Aug 2025. https://www.ga.com/ga-marks-completion-of-the-world-s-largest-and-most-powerful-pulsed-superconducting-magnet-for-fusion-energy
  8. [8] American Nuclear Society / Nuclear Newswire. "General Atomics Marks Completion of ITER's Superconducting Fusion Magnet." 4 Sept 2025. https://www.ans.org/news/2025-09-04/article-7345/
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The Loyal Wingman Arrives:


U.S Air Force Awards GA-ASI Production Contract for FQ-42A CCA | General Atomics

June 17, 2026 — Airpower Analysis

CCA Production Contracts Signal a New Era in Autonomous Airpower

With simultaneous awards to General Atomics and Anduril, the U.S. Air Force has crossed an irreversible threshold—committing to mass production of a class of uncrewed fighters that did not exist in the inventory four months ago.

BLUF 

On 17 June 2026, the U.S. Air Force awarded concurrent Engineering and Manufacturing Development and initial production contracts to General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) and Anduril Industries for their Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) platforms—the FQ-42A Dark Merlin and FQ-44A Fury, respectively. Both aircraft drop the prototype "Y" prefix and enter the active inventory. The service plans to field approximately 150 combined CCAs by end of decade and eventually acquire more than 1,000 across the fleet. Contracts were awarded four months ahead of schedule, autonomy software competition narrows to three vendors (Anduril, Shield AI, RTX-Collins), and per-unit cost is confirmed to be tracking below one-third the price of an F-35. This dual-award decision—rejecting a traditional winner-take-all selection—represents the most consequential structural change in U.S. fighter acquisition since the late Cold War.

A Threshold Crossed

The history of American fighter development has been one of long timelines, soaring costs, and periodic program resets. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter required more than two decades from concept selection to widespread operational deployment. Against that backdrop, the production contract awards announced today represent something unusual in the annals of defense acquisition: a new class of fighter aircraft conceived, designed, flight-tested, and placed under production contract in roughly 26 months from initial industry selection.

The Air Force announced on 17 June 2026 that it had awarded Engineering and Manufacturing Development and production contracts to both GA-ASI and Anduril Industries, the two companies that had been developing CCA prototypes under a Technology Maturation and Risk Reduction (TMRR) award since April 2024. The contracts cover the first three production lots, with the service planning to field approximately 150 combined aircraft by the end of the decade. Plans call for eventual procurement exceeding 1,000 CCAs across all configurations. The contract vehicle separates airframe procurement from mission autonomy software—a deliberately novel acquisition structure designed to preserve competition, prevent vendor lock, and allow algorithmic upgrades at software speed rather than hardware procurement timelines.

Col. Timothy Helfrich, Portfolio Acquisition Executive for Fighters and Advanced Aircraft, told reporters the awards came four months ahead of the program's original schedule, driven by the demonstrated maturity of both competing designs. Critically, this was not simply an extension of the 2024 development contract. The Air Force resolicited all five original competitors—GA-ASI, Anduril, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman—before confirming the two incumbents. "This is not just a continuation of the contracts we had with Anduril and General Atomics," Helfrich said. "This was a completely new source selection." The decision to sustain two competing hardware lines rather than selecting a single winner is itself a departure from traditional acquisition doctrine, reflecting the Air Force's judgment that schedule and industrial capacity outweigh the cost savings typically attributed to winner-take-all production.

The FQ-42A Dark Merlin: From Predator to Fighter in Twenty Months

GA-ASI's entry carries a lineage traceable directly to the company's long experience with large uncrewed aircraft. The XQ-67A Off-Board Sensing Station—developed under contract with the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) and first flown in 2024—provided the aerodynamic and systems foundation for what became the YFQ-42A. The company describes the relationship as a "genus/species" development model: a common core airframe rapidly adapted across mission variants under what GA-ASI brands the "Gambit Series," which notionally includes dedicated configurations for long-endurance surveillance, air-to-air superiority, and air-to-ground strike.

The YFQ-42A completed its first flight in August 2025, a milestone that came just 15 months after the April 2024 contract award—a development pace the company characterizes as among the fastest in the history of fighter aircraft. That aggressive schedule came with predictable engineering friction. On 6 April 2026, a YFQ-42A prototype was lost shortly after takeoff in California; no personnel were injured, but the aircraft was a total loss. A joint Air Force/GA-ASI safety review isolated the cause as an autopilot miscalculation in weight and center-of-gravity parameters, prompting a software remediation. The fleet returned to flight testing on 21 May 2026 following the corrective action. Helfrich confirmed the incident played no role in the production source selection decision.

The aircraft's modular design supports rapid integration of government-furnished mission systems. By February 2026, GA-ASI had built and flown multiple airframes, conducting push-button autonomous takeoffs and landings and executing the first flight of the service's mission autonomy software on the platform. The company announced the aircraft's official nickname—Dark Merlin—in February 2026, with the designation drawing on the imagery of the dark merlin falcon, a small, highly aggressive raptor native to the Pacific Northwest. GA-ASI President David R. Alexander was direct in assessing the moment: "Moving to production on FQ-42A is the result of an extraordinary partnership and many years of investments between General Atomics and the U.S. Air Force. We've been preparing for this order, and manufacturing is already well underway."

Beyond the Air Force program, GA-ASI has moved to expand the platform's market. In October 2025, the company was selected to support the U.S. Navy's carrier-capable CCA design effort—the first indication that a naval variant of the Dark Merlin concept is in development. In February 2026, the Marine Corps selected GA-ASI for evaluation in the MUX TACAIR (Marine Air-Ground Task Force Uncrewed Expeditionary Tactical Air) CCA program, integrating a Marine-furnished mission kit onto the YFQ-42A surrogate. GA-ASI has also partnered with its German affiliate, General Atomics Aerotec Systems GmbH, to offer a European-built derivative of the design for allied customers seeking local production.

"We are moving with urgency on this program, and that is urgency with purpose. It is important for us to deliver CCA capability to the warfighter."
— Col. Timothy Helfrich, USAF, Portfolio Acquisition Executive, Fighters & Advanced Aircraft

The FQ-44A Fury: A New Company Wins a Fighter Program

Anduril Industries entered the defense industry as a software and systems integration company, acquiring Blue Force Technologies—developer of the Fury unmanned aircraft—in 2023. That acquisition provided the aerodynamic platform around which Anduril built its CCA proposition, pairing the single-engine Fury airframe, powered by a Williams International FJ44 turbofan, with the company's proprietary Lattice AI operating system. The YFQ-44A completed its maiden flight on 31 October 2025, approximately two months after the Dark Merlin's first flight, and has since conducted multiple sorties in the California test environment.

Anduril has been characteristically aggressive in demonstrating manufacturing readiness. In March 2026, the company opened Arsenal-1, a large-scale production facility in Pickaway County, Ohio, some 20 miles outside Columbus, and immediately began assembling pre-production Fury aircraft there. The facility is designed around flexibility rather than dedicated tooling—a deliberate choice, in the words of co-founder and COO Matt Grimm, to minimize fixed monuments and maximize the factory's ability to transition between programs and configurations. Arsenal-1's production pipeline includes not only the FQ-44A but also Anduril's Roadrunner vertical-takeoff drone interceptor and the Barracuda family of cruise missiles, a product mix that reflects a broader bet on volume autonomous systems manufacturing. The company claims to be the first new entrant to win a U.S. fighter aircraft program since the 1970s.

Anduril's VP for autonomous airpower, Mark Shushnar, was blunt in characterizing the FQ-44A's operational performance: "In its current configuration, FQ-44 has the ferry range necessary to deploy anywhere in the world. It can take off and land on a short field. It has a combat radius that significantly exceeds the combat radius for current crewed fighters, and the speed to keep up." The cost of both CCA platforms remains classified, though Helfrich confirmed the Air Force is meeting the threshold criterion: unit cost below one-third that of an F-35—which in current terms suggests a target price in the range of $20 million to $30 million per aircraft. Anduril separately closed a $5 billion Series H private funding round in June 2026, bringing the company's valuation to approximately $61 billion and its cumulative capital raised to more than $6.3 billion—a financial profile that substantially de-risks the manufacturing scale-up the production contract demands.

Software Sold Separately: The Autonomy Competition

Among the most strategically significant architectural choices embedded in the CCA program is the deliberate decoupling of airframe procurement from mission autonomy software. The Air Force has developed a government-owned Autonomy Government Reference Architecture (A-GRA)—a software-defined open interface standard that allows mission autonomy algorithms from any compliant vendor to be integrated onto any compliant platform, swapped, and upgraded without modification to the aircraft itself. The intent is explicit: prevent the vendor lock that has historically constrained weapon system evolution and preserve a competitive ecosystem in which the best algorithms can be deployed rapidly across the fleet.

By February 2026, two autonomy vendors had been confirmed for the TMRR phase: RTX subsidiary Collins Aerospace, providing its Sidekick Collaborative Mission Autonomy software for the YFQ-42A, and Shield AI, providing its Hivemind platform for the YFQ-44A. Collins logged the first mission autonomy flight on the YFQ-42A on 12 February 2026; Shield AI's Hivemind completed its first flight on the YFQ-44A on 24 February. Both systems are described as platform-agnostic through A-GRA compliance—meaning either software stack could theoretically operate on either aircraft, a flexibility the service intends to exploit.

The 17 June announcement further narrows the autonomy competition. Three vendors—Anduril (as an autonomy provider independent of its hardware role), RTX-Collins, and Shield AI—were selected to continue developing mission autonomy for Increment 1 CCA, beating out GA-ASI, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman in a parallel competition. The six-month performance period announced today will advance each vendor's autonomy software to meet initial operational capability criteria, followed by a further down-select. A single autonomy vendor for Increment 1 is expected to be chosen in summer 2027. The Air Force is also conducting a separate, still-open competition for command-and-control software. It is notable that Anduril occupies simultaneous positions as a hardware competitor, an autonomy competitor, and a C2 contender—a degree of vertical integration that will bear watching as the program matures.

The mission autonomy task set for Increment 1 is initially bounded: air-to-air weapons employment and bidirectional communication with crewed aircraft, enabling human pilots to assign tasks and receive sensor data from their CCA wingmen. The scope is explicitly designed to expand. "We are not locked into a single solution or a single vendor," Helfrich noted in an earlier program discussion. "We are instead building a competitive ecosystem where the best algorithms can be deployed rapidly to the warfighter on any A-GRA compliant platform."

Architecture of the Coming Air Wing

The CCA program does not exist in isolation; it is the affordable-mass layer of the Air Force's Next Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) family of systems. The centerpiece of that family—the Boeing F-47, selected in March 2025 under a contract exceeding $20 billion—is a sixth-generation, crewed, stealth air superiority aircraft with a projected combat radius of more than 1,000 nautical miles and a first-flight target of 2028. The Air Force envisions the force structure in ratios: approximately two CCAs paired with each of its planned 185-plus F-47s, and additional CCA pairings for F-35A squadrons. The resulting math supports the oft-cited 1,000-CCA target across all configurations and increments.

Critically, the F-22 Raptor—not the F-47, whose operational availability is now projected to slip to the mid-2030s—will be the first platform to operationally integrate CCAs when they reach the frontlines. The F-22's role will transition from a predominantly autonomous air superiority platform to a mission-commander node directing FQ-42A and FQ-44A wingmen in complex, contested scenarios. This reframes the F-22's remaining service life not as an era of managed obsolescence but as a period of genuine tactical evolution. An F-22 directing a flight of semi-autonomous FQ-42As into an adversary's integrated air defense environment is a qualitatively different proposition than the current single-platform air superiority model.

The multi-service dimensions of the CCA program are also accelerating. The Air Force is coordinating with the Marine Corps, Navy, and U.S. Special Operations Command on a common baseline for CCA components, to include autonomy architecture, the government reference architecture, and datalink. The Navy's carrier-capable CCA—with GA-ASI selected for early design work in October 2025—will almost certainly derive from the same modular hardware and software architecture now entering production for the Air Force. This joint coherence, if sustained through program evolution, would represent a departure from the historically costly service-specific acquisition paths that have characterized previous combat aviation programs.

Industrial and Strategic Implications

The dual-award decision carries implications that extend beyond the immediate programs. By sustaining both GA-ASI and Anduril as competing production vendors, the Air Force is constructing an industrial base capable of volume production of a category of aircraft—semi-autonomous uncrewed fighters—that scarcely existed three years ago. Both companies have aggressively sought international interest: GA-ASI through its German affiliate and anticipated foreign military sales pathways, and Anduril through partnerships with allied nations. Australia's involvement in CCA standardization discussions suggests that the FQ-series aircraft may form the foundation of an allied autonomous airpower architecture, not merely a U.S. domestic capability.

The cost structure of the program also matters in ways that transcend the balance sheet. The Air Force has consistently articulated that CCAs exist to provide "affordable mass"—the ability to deploy tactically relevant numbers of capable platforms into high-threat environments without committing the lives and irreplaceable training investment that a fifth-generation pilot represents. This logic is directly responsive to the threat environment of the Indo-Pacific theater, where a near-peer adversary has demonstrated the will and industrial capacity to field sophisticated integrated air defense networks, advanced long-range missiles, and its own generation of stealth fighters. Against that threat, a force architecture that concentrates capability in a small number of exquisitely capable but scarce and expensive crewed platforms is brittle. CCAs provide the redundancy and distributed lethality that shifts the strategic calculus.

It is not lost on experienced defense observers that the companies winning CCA production contracts are not the traditional primes that have dominated fighter procurement for generations. Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman—the industrial pillars of every crewed fighter program since the F-15—were all eliminated from CCA hardware competition. The winners are a privately held company with a 30-year history of unmanned aircraft, and a defense technology startup whose founding principal came from the consumer technology industry. That outcome does not reflect a collapse of traditional prime contractor competence; it reflects the Air Force's deliberate judgment that the skills most critical to CCA success—software-defined autonomy, modular open architecture, high-rate manufacturing scalability, and aggressive cost discipline—reside more robustly in the new entrants. That is a finding with implications for procurement policy well beyond the CCA program itself.

Open Questions

Production awards in hand, the CCA program's most consequential near-term uncertainties involve autonomy and operational integration rather than hardware. The selection of a single mission autonomy vendor in summer 2027 will determine the cognitive architecture of Increment 1 CCAs for the foreseeable future—and the A-GRA's promise of genuine plug-and-play replaceability has not yet been demonstrated at operational scale. The command-and-control competition remains open with all vendors eligible, adding a third procurement competition running in parallel with the hardware and autonomy contests.

The April crash of a YFQ-42A prototype is a reminder that autonomous aircraft development retains the potential for costly and operationally significant failures, even at an advanced program stage. The autopilot weight-and-balance miscalculation that caused the loss—and the subsequent software remediation—illustrates the degree to which the behavioral envelope of semi-autonomous aircraft in operational configurations remains incompletely understood. As production quantities scale, the risk profile of fleet-wide software anomalies will require close attention.

Funding coherence is also a persistent concern. The CCA program currently carries approximately $804 million in combined FY2026 mandatory and discretionary funding, with the FY2027 budget projecting approximately $1.5 billion across the Air Force and Navy. Congressional authorization and appropriations processes have historically introduced volatility into long-range procurement programs, and the absence of enacted FY2027 appropriations at the time of contract award introduces downstream production-rate uncertainty. The Air Force has indicated it plans to award additional production contracts in FY2027 once the budget is enacted.

What is not in question, as of 17 June 2026, is that the United States has crossed a threshold from which there is no return. The FQ-42A Dark Merlin and FQ-44A Fury are no longer prototypes. They are production aircraft. The loyal wingman, long a concept paper and a wind-tunnel model, has joined the inventory.

Sources and References

  1. [1] General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "U.S. Air Force Awards GA-ASI Production Contract for FQ-42A CCA." Press Release, 17 June 2026. https://www.ga.com/us-air-force-awards-ga-asi-production-contract-for-fq-42a-cca
  2. [2] Everstine, Brian. "USAF Awards CCA Production Contracts To Anduril, General Atomics." Aviation Week & Space Technology / Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, 17 June 2026. https://aviationweek.com/defense/aircraft-propulsion/usaf-awards-cca-production-contracts-anduril-general-atomics
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  4. [4] Hadley, Greg. "Air Force Selects Both General Atomics and Anduril for CCA Production." Air & Space Forces Magazine, 17 June 2026. https://www.airandspaceforces.com/air-force-general-atomics-anduril-cca-production-contracts/
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  7. [7] General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "GA-ASI Welcomes USAF Designation for New CCA: YFQ-42A." Press Release, 3 March 2025. https://www.ga-asi.com/ga-asi-welcomes-usaf-designation-for-new-cca-yfq-42a
  8. [8] General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. "U.S. Marine Corps Selects GA-ASI for MUX TACAIR Collaborative Combat Aircraft Program." Press Release, 10 February 2026. https://www.ga-asi.com/us-marine-corps-selects-ga-asi-for-mux-tacair-collaborative-combat-aircraft-program
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  10. [10] Gordon, Chris. "Look Inside Anduril's New Factory as CCA Production Begins." Air & Space Forces Magazine, 24 March 2026. https://www.airandspaceforces.com/look-anduril-new-factory-cca-production/
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This analysis was prepared as an independent, open-source assessment based entirely on publicly available official announcements, industry press releases, congressional research service publications, and major defense press reporting. No classified sources were consulted or referenced. All cost figures cited reflect publicly attributed government statements. The author has professional background in radar systems and unmanned aircraft systems engineering.

 

AFRL "Flyer" — Deep Dive:

Aerospace & Defense · Supercomputing · 22 June 2026 — Technical Follow-On Analysis · Supply Chain · G...