Six Chinese Tech Projects that might Change the World- A glimpse of six
advanced research projects underway on the Chinese mainland
One
of China’s leading physicists has called for the creation of a government
agency similar to the US institute that develops new technology for the
military. Professor Pan Jianwei, the nation’s leading expert on quantum physics
and executive vice-president of the University of Science and Technology of
China, said Washington’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency in the US,
or DARPA, was a good model of how to pursue innovative research for military
applications, including the internet, GPS and voice recognition technology.
Reporter Stephen Chen takes introduces us briefly to six advanced research
projects underway on the Chinese mainland:
6. The maiden flight of Long March 5 rocket
The maiden flight of Long March 5 rocket is scheduled at
the end of this year from Wenchang Satellite Launch Centre in Hainan. With a
maximum payload capacity of 25 tonnes, the Long March 5 will be the biggest
heavy-lift rocket that China has built. It will play a crucial role in the
construction of China’s first space station around 2020 by delivering large
components to the lower Earth orbit.
5. China’s first passenger jet C919
The nation’s first passenger jet C919 is expected to take
its maiden flight this year. The narrow-body, twin-engine jet airliners, built
by the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China in Shanghai, aim to challenge
Boeing and Airbus in domestic and international markets
4. China’s first space station to be
completed by around 2022
3. The world’s first quantum communication
satellite
China will launch the world’s first quantum communication
satellite in June, bringing the technology of quantum teleportation in science
fiction a step closer to real life. The satellite is expected to create an
unbreakable link of encrypted communication between China and Europe.
2. Chinese first deep sea station
China is also developing its first deep sea station which
will allow three crew members to live and work at depth beyond 1,000 metres for
two months. The deep sea station is expected to strengthen the nation’s ability
to explore and exploit minerals and energy resources on previously inaccessible
ocean floors. The project is expected to be completed before 2020.
1.
Construction of the Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST) in
Guizhou
Construction of the Five-hundred-metre Aperture Spherical
Telescope (FAST) in Guizhou will be completed in September. The FAST will be
the world’s largest single-dish radio telescope with three times the
sensitivity of the Arecibo Observatory built by the United States in Puerto
Rico. A major mission of FAST is to look for radio signals sent out by outer
space intelligence. Photo: National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy
of Sciences
No comments:
Post a Comment