Nvidia, Dassault Systèmes Partner for Digital Twin AI Platform

This post was originally published on Data Center Knowledge

Nvidia and French 3D software firm Dassault Systèmes have unveiled a partnership to bring virtual twin architecture to the enterprise.

The companies will merge Dassault’s virtual twin technology with Nvidia’s AI Infrastructure, open models, and software libraries to establish a workable real-world solution. Virtual twins, also known as digital twins, create a data-driven virtual replica of a real-world asset, system, or process. 

For data centers, virtual twins can help with power and cooling optimization, capacity planning for AI workloads, failure prediction and more. Virtual twin technology presents benefits for multiple industries, from manufacturing to the energy sector.

Grand View Research projects the digital twin market to reach $328.5 billion by 2033, fueled by increased demand for predictive maintenance, remote monitoring, and production optimization. Large enterprises tend to dominate the digital twin market.

“Physical AI is the next frontier of artificial intelligence, grounded in the laws of the physical world,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a statement. He said the partnership will “transform how millions of researchers, designers, and engineers build the world’s largest industries.

Nvidia is adopting Dassault’s model-based systems engineering (MBSE) to design AI factories with the Nvidia Rubin platform and integrate its Omniverse DSX Blueprint for large-scale deployment.

“This partnership signals that the

Read the rest of this post, which was originally published on Data Center Knowledge.

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