The ePlane’s e200x aircraft will use NVIDIA’s state-of-the-art edge computing device for critical on-board applications.
The ePlane Company has announced that it is developing India’s first electric air taxi by leveraging advanced simulation and computing technologies from NVIDIA.
As part of this initiative, the company will build a high-fidelity digital twin of its e200x aircraft using NVIDIA Omniverse libraries. The digital twin is expected to set a new benchmark in aerospace simulation, enabling engineers to recreate highly accurate virtual environments for testing and validation.
The e200x’s virtual model will use physics-accurate digital reality to simulate complex aerodynamic interactions, sensor behaviour, and diverse flight scenarios with a level of precision beyond traditional simulation tools. This approach will allow the engineering team to evaluate aircraft performance under a wide range of real-world conditions before physical deployment.
In addition, the aircraft will integrate the NVIDIA IGX platform as its onboard computing system. The platform will support mission-critical applications by safely processing data from multiple sensors, including cameras and radars. Through advanced data fusion, decision-making algorithms, and visualisation capabilities, the system aims to enhance pilot situational awareness—an essential requirement for emerging Urban Air Mobility operations.
A key focus of the collaboration is validation, a significant challenge in deep-tech aviation. Physical testing of edge cases, such as extreme weather conditions, sensor failures, or potential collision scenarios, can be both costly and risky. By leveraging the e200x digital twin, the company can simulate millions of virtual flight kilometres, training and refining its algorithms in complex environments before the aircraft takes to the skies.
Looking ahead, The ePlane Company also plans to explore NVIDIA Cosmos world foundation models and the NVIDIA Nemotron family of open models to further strengthen its development roadmap.
“We are not just building an aircraft; we are building an ecosystem. Collaborating with NVIDIA allows us to blur the line between the digital and the physical. By validating our flight operations suite in NVIDIA Omniverse, we are effectively pushing the limits of the aircraft thousands of times in simulation so that we never have to in reality. This level of rigour is what defines sovereign aerospace capability,” said Prof. Satya Chakravarthy, Founder & CTO, The ePlane Company.
The collaboration also opens a new frontier for the Indian aviation sector. The computational intensity of these simulations requires high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructure, utilising top-tier GPUs to render physics in real-time. This high-fidelity digital twin can also serve as a predictive analytics engine, mirroring the configuration of the actual aircraft components to predict maintenance needs long before a failure occurs.

















