Issue link: https://resources.mouser.com/i/1495601
Foreword Texas Instruments Incorporated (Nasdaq: TXN) is a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures, tests and sells analog and embedded processing chips for markets such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment and enterprise systems. Our passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors is alive today, as each generation of innovation builds upon the last to make our technology smaller, more efficient, more reliable and more affordable–making it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere. We think of this as Engineering Progress. It's what we do and have been doing for decades. Learn more at TI.com. Mouser Electronics, a Berkshire Hathaway company, is an authorized semiconductor and electronic component distributor focused on New Product Introductions from its leading manufacturer partners. Serving the global electronic design engineer and buyer community, the global distributor's website, mouser.com, is available in multiple languages and currencies and features more than 6.8 million products from over 1,200 manufacturer brands. Mouser offers 27 support locations worldwide to provide best-in-class customer service in local language, currency and time zone. The distributor ships to over 650,000 customers in 223 countries/territories from its 1 million- square-foot, state-of-the-art distribution facilities in the Dallas, Texas, metro area. For more information, visit https://www.mouser.com. From its release in September of 1962, the animated series "The Jetsons" mesmerized the world (and me) about a future when flying cars would become a reality of everyday life. We are now seeing technologies from multiple markets such as automotive, autonomous drones, and commercial aviation come together to turn what was once science fiction into a reality. With hundreds of new vehicles in development, the Urban Air Mobility (UAM) industry is working to develop an ecosystem to solve challenging issues around energy storage, motor inverter design, and safety and certification requirements. The goal is to produce a vehicle that is as safe as commercial planes, as light as possible to maximize range, and offers an operating cost that approaches a typical automobile. Solving these challenges requires close collaboration among all the players in the industry. In the next few years, we will see the first UAM aircraft certifications and commercial flights happening across the world. Over the next 10 years, we will see the market mature and costs come down so that short distance, point-to- point flights will become common place in our densely populated areas. Travelers looking to avoid congested roadways will move to the skies for short and reliable flights hopping to a nearby vertiport. With the UAMs in development, these flights will be fast, cheap, quiet and safe, making an ideal trip for thousands of daily voyages. By Jason Clark, Sector Lead, Aerospace and Defense, Industrial Systems Team, Texas Instruments 5 Addressing New Challenges in Urban Air Mobility