ONERA lifts the veil on 70 years of its history: 1996 to the present day - A period of major changes

Transition in the late 1990s

During the 1990s, the defense sector learned lessons from conflicts (Gulf War, ex-Yugoslavia) that had thrust into prominence weaponry of precision and stealth. ONERA had been getting to grips with these topics even before these events occurred.

BABI anechoic chamber © ONERA
BABI anechoic chamber © ONERA

It pursued its work in this field, developing experimental stealth measurement resources (BABI chamber), and studying stealth materials, while progressing in the fields of reconnaissance and very high optical resolution imaging, optronics and radar, with the synthetic aperture radar (RAMSES).

RAMSES NG © ONERA
RAMSES NG © ONERA
RAMSES NG © ONERA

The period was also marked in France by reform to the defense armory and a steep drop in the budget assigned to defense research. The restructuring this involved for the DGA, the French armament procurement agency, had a knock-on effect for ONERA. All the same, these difficulties did not prevent it from developing very long range detection radars, in particular transhorizon radars. Likewise, in the second half of the 1990s, the GRAVES (Grand Réseau Appliqué à la Veille Spatiale) radar-based space surveillance system - unique in Europe - was developed.

GRAVES radar: views of antennas on transmission and reception site © ONERAGRAVES radar © ONERA
GRAVES radar: views of antennas on transmission and reception site © ONERA
GRAVES radar: views of antennas on transmission and reception site © ONERA

In 1997, 17 thematic scientific departments were created at ONERA, grouped into 4 branches under the supervision of a general scientific directorate. An increasing part of the activity turns to the execution of contracts. Long-term collaborations will be developed, for example with MBDA and SNECMA (now SAFRAN), in the field of turbojets (high temperature materials, modeling of internal engine flows), or with SOFRADIR (characterization and development of new detector concepts infrared). In addition, to meet the needs of the Armée de l'Air, ONERA created in 1992 a center in Salon de Provence, devoted to research and teaching activities in the fields of radar, optronics and flight mechanics.

M88 engine of the Rafale © ONERA
M88 engine of the Rafale © ONERA
Blade of the M88 © snecma
Blade of the M88 © snecma
Scorpio infrared camera (ONERA/SOFRADIR) © ONERA
Scorpio infrared camera (ONERA/SOFRADIR) © ONERA
Salon de Provence center, LIPS: Laboratory for research into pilot-system interactions © ONERA
Salon de Provence center, LIPS: Laboratory for research into pilot-system interactions © ONERA

An evolving environment (2002-2016)

The end of the Cold War brought with it not a safer world, but an increasingly complex one. A growing number of countries had aerospace ambitions, in particular focused on defense. To address these new challenges, the French government sought to initiate new collaborative modes between public research and businesses, which in 2005 began to be manifested in the form of competitive clusters. Study and research would receive less funding from the major national agencies, which implied thematic collaborations combining different partners. The aerospace stakeholders would also be bolstering their own research capacity, and their computational resources. ONERA had to adapt to this new state of affairs.

During this period research continued apace, in particular in the field of materials, the lightening of structures, crash resistance and equipment service life. ONERA explored innovative concepts aimed at reinforcing the performance of the strategic forces, and pursued its investigations into stealth, air intakes and ammunition holds. With Airbus, it took part in studies of the A380, then of the A350, in the fields of aerodynamics, structures and avionics. It also contributed to the development of the Neuron, the tactical drone demonstrator, led by Dassault Aviation.

At the vanguard of an aerospace sector that is decisive for national sovereignty, ONERA continue to play its part, more than ever, in ensuring the dynamism and competitiveness of this high-stakes industry.

AIRBUS structural mockup for crash tests
AIRBUS structural mockup for crash tests

@AIRBUS/ONERA: Airbus A350 XWB mockup in wind tunnel
@AIRBUS/ONERA: Airbus A350 XWB mockup in wind tunnel

Numerical simulation of flow around a fuselage-wing mockup, CAT3D designed by ONERA for studying active flow control © ONERA
Numerical simulation of flow around a fuselage-wing mockup, CAT3D designed by ONERA for studying active flow control © ONERA

Mockup of a future unpiloted fighter jet in the Fauga-Mauzac F1 wind tunnel, © ONERA
Mockup of a future unpiloted fighter jet in the Fauga-Mauzac F1 wind tunnel, © ONERA

Neuron in flight © Dassault-Aviation
Neuron in flight © Dassault-Aviation

Flow visualization of near-wall region with color rendering in the F1 wind tunnel at Fauga-Mauzac, AVE experimental validation aircraft © ONERA
Flow visualization of near-wall region with color rendering in the F1 wind tunnel at Fauga-Mauzac, AVE experimental validation aircraft © ONERA