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Briefing on Aerospace & Defense Applications of Physics AI with Juan Alonso at CDFAM DC 2026

About this Opportunity:

At CDFAM DC, Luminary invites select attendees to a rare, private 30-minute briefing with Professor Juan Alonso, one of aerospace’s most influential minds and CTO of Luminary.

Professor Alonso, Chair of the Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics at Stanford University and former Director of NASA’s Fundamental Aeronautics Program, will share his thoughts on how Physics AI will reshape aerospace design exploration, product development, optimization, and digital twins to enable to bring better products to market more quickly.

Only 5 spots are available. Submit your request by July 10, 2026 using this form. If selected, we’ll reach out to schedule your meeting during the week of the conference in Washington D.C. Even if you will not attend the conference, but are still interested to talk to Juan, please apply and we will try our best to schedule a meeting afterwards. 

What You'll Learn:

In your exclusive session with Professor Alonso, you'll gain firsthand insight into:

  • The fundamentals of breakthrough Physics AI for aerospace
  • Practical applications including AeroDB for guidance & navigation
  • Practical steps to integrate this emerging technology into existing workflows.
  • Recent breakthroughs to improve model inference errors and model generalizability

Who Should Attend:

This opportunity is designed specifically for aerospace R&D leaders, including:

  • Directors and VPs of Engineering or Innovation
  • CTOs and Heads of Product Development
  • Program Managers overseeing aerospace design and simulation
  • Technical leads seeking a competitive edge in computational engineering

If you're shaping the future of aerospace — or want to — this is for you.

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Meet Juan Alonso

Juan Alonso_headshot-1

Juan Alonso

CTO & Co-founder of Luminary
Professor & Chair, Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics at Stanford University

Juan is Chair of the Department of Aeronautics & Astronautics at Stanford University and served as Director of the NASA Fundamental Aeronautics Program. At Stanford, he focuses on advanced computational methods for aerospace system design.