Amazon
Web Services, Inc. (AWS) and
Formula One Group (Formula 1) have completed a Computational Fluid
Dynamics (CFD) project to simulate the aerodynamics of cars while
racing, carrying out detailed simulations that have resulted in the car
design for the 2021 racing season. The CFD project used over 1,150
compute cores to run detailed simulations comprising of over 550 million
data points that model the impact of one car's aerodynamic wake on
another. Using the unmatched scalability of AWS, Formula 1 was able to
reduce the average time to run simulations by 70 percent - from 60 hours
down to 18. The project ran for six months using Amazon Elastic Compute
Cloud (Amazon EC2) c5n instances and delivered performance equivalent
to that of a supercomputer, for a small fraction of the cost.
Increasing
excitement for fans, by enabling closer, wheel-to-wheel, racing, was at
the core of the project. For Formula 1 cars, the downforce generated by
their aerodynamics is the single largest performance differentiator,
helping a car travel faster through corners. The current generation of
cars suffer a loss of downforce when they are running close to one
another, reducing a drivers' ability to sustain close racing and
increasing the difficulty of overtaking. Currently, a car running one
car length behind another loses up to 50 percent of its downforce. To
reduce this downforce loss, F1 used AWS to look closely at how the
aerodynamics of cars interact when racing in close proximity. These
simulations looked at cars in common racing situations and the results
have driven the changes to the proposed 2021 car design. With the
insights gained from these simulations, Formula 1 has been able to
design a car with only 15 percent downforce loss at the same, one car
length distance. The resulting car will feature a brand new bodywork
design with a new front wing shape, simplified suspension, new rear end
layout, underfloor tunnels, wheel wake control devices, and will run on
18-inch wheels with low profile tyres for the first time.
CFD
simulates the impact of a liquid or gas on an object and requires
extensive compute capacity to perform this kind of simulation, requiring
high performance computing (HPC) clusters to do the job. However,
running HPC clusters on-premises requires considerable upfront capital
expenditure, lengthy procurement cycles, and regular hardware refreshes
to avoid obsolescence. AWS provides the most elastic and scalable cloud
infrastructure to run HPC applications. With virtually unlimited
capacity, engineers and researchers can innovate beyond the limitations
of on-premises HPC infrastructure. To complete the CFD work, Formula 1
used AWS ParallelCluster on Amazon EC2 to run the OpenFOAM CFD
framework, and Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) for data
storage. Leveraging the scalability of the cloud, Formula 1 was able to
run CFD simulations on core counts much larger than they were
previously able to execute. The increased speed with which the
aerodynamics team could run detailed, two car turbulence simulations on
AWS meant they could increase the number of car designs they could
investigate from one to five per week. Moving forward, there are plans
to expand the application further, up to 2,300 cores, and to introduce
AWS Machine Learning (ML) tools, such as Amazon SageMaker, to allow ML
technologies to help with the design and further optimize the
performance of the car.
"This
project with AWS was one of the most revolutionary in the history of
Formula 1 aerodynamics," said Pat Symonds, Chief Technical Officer of
Formula 1. "Nobody designs a car to come in second, but for this CFD
project we were looking at how cars perform in the wake of another, as
opposed to running in clean air. We have been able to use AWS
technologies to understand the incredible aerodynamic complexities
associated with multi-car simulations, and are pleased that the results
indicate we have made excellent progress towards our aims of closer
racing."
"Customers
are using AWS for CFD projects to design everything from aircraft to
medical devices, so it is exciting to now be part of the design of the
next generation of racing cars," said Matt Garman, Vice President of
Compute Services at AWS, Inc. "The work Formula 1 is doing with CFD is
at the leading edge of cloud usage and we are always amazed at the
fascinating way that they are utilising our technologies to increase the
performance of their sport and the experience they give fans. As CFD
work with Formula 1 continues, we look forward to seeing the resulting
car and are excited to see it on the track in 2021."
For more detail on how Formula 1 is using AWS as their cloud and ML provider, visit: https://aws.amazon.com/f1insights/