Automated Discovery for Design and Control of Turbulent Systems (AutoDIDACTS)
Overview
Buyer
Place of Performance
NAICS
PSC
Set Aside
Original Source
Timeline
Qualification Details
Fit reasons
- NAICS alignment with historical contract wins in similar service areas.
- Scope strongly matches core technical capabilities and delivery model.
Risks
- Past performance thresholds may require one additional teaming partner.
- Potential clarification needed on staffing minimums before bid/no-bid.
Next steps
Validate eligibility requirements, assign capture owner, and schedule partner outreach to confirm teaming strategy before submission planning.
Quick Summary
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), through its Defense Sciences Office, is soliciting innovative proposals for the Automated Discovery for Design and Control of Turbulent Systems (AutoDIDACTS) program. This Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) seeks revolutionary advances in data-informed models and principles for aeronautical design and optimal control of turbulent systems. Proposals are due May 28, 2026, at 4:00 p.m. ET.
Purpose & Scope
The AutoDIDACTS program aims to develop generalizable models and principles for aeronautical design and the optimal control of turbulent systems by leveraging data-informed approaches. DARPA is specifically interested in revolutionary advancements, explicitly excluding research that offers only evolutionary improvements to current practices. The principal objective is to demonstrate the use of precision ground-truth experimental data to derive macroscale design principles and surrogate models that can guide aeronautical design.
Key Requirements
Proposals for Phase I (24 months) should focus on one of two areas:
- Macroscale Design Principles: Developing more generalizable principles with greater predictive capability across various flow regimes and boundary conditions.
- Predictive Surrogate Models: Creating models amenable to design exploration and optimization across a wide range of airfoils, flow conditions, and multi-objective constraints. Key challenges include rigorous uncertainty quantification, model interpretability, and demonstrating universality. Proposals must address all goals of Phase I; partial solutions will not be considered.
Contract Details
Anticipated award instruments include Procurement Contracts, Cooperative Agreements, or Other Transaction Agreements for Research. Multiple awards are expected. Phase I has a 24-month base period, with a target start date of September 2026. Phase II (24 months) will address challenge problems specified in a future solicitation. For procurement contracts, Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification (CMMC) Level 1 compliance is required.
Eligibility & Set-Aside
This opportunity is open to all responsible sources, including U.S. and non-U.S. entities. While Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Small Businesses, Small Disadvantaged Businesses, and Minority Institutions are encouraged to submit, no portion of this opportunity is set aside.
Submission & Evaluation
- Proposal Abstract Due Date: April 15, 2026, at 4:00 p.m. ET
- Question Submittal Closed: May 15, 2026, at 4:00 p.m. ET
- Proposal Due Date: May 28, 2026, at 4:00 p.m. ET
- Evaluation Criteria: Overall Scientific and Technical Merit, Potential Contribution and Relevance to the DARPA Mission, and Cost and Schedule Realism. Proposers must use mandatory templates for abstracts (Attachment B), technical/management volumes (Attachment D), and cost volumes (Attachment E, with mandatory Attachment F spreadsheet). A model Cooperative Agreement (Model_CA_and_Exhibits_A-E) and a model Other Transaction Agreement (Attachment G) are provided for review.
Important Notes
Collaboration among performers is expected, and an Associate Contractors Agreement (Attachment H) outlines requirements for information exchange and cooperation. Rough Order of Magnitude (ROM) information for Phase II is requested for planning purposes.