China Daily

Spotlight focused on science, tech frontiers

Hypersonic craft, computer processor redefine fast

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@ chinadaily.com.cn

From hypersonic aircraft to supercompu­ter modules, science lovers were enthralled by China’s newest and most advanced scientific hardware featured at Saturday’s launch of the 18th National Science and Technology Week in Beijing.

The opening ceremony was held at the Military Museum of the Chinese People’s Revolution with 460 exhibition­s. The national science week, founded in 2001, is the largest, longest and most participat­ed-in annual science event in China, said Minister of Science and Technology Wang Zhigang at the opening ceremony.

More than 300 million people are expected to participat­e in about 20,000 open days, exhibition­s and other sciencerel­ated events across China this week. The purpose of these events is to educate the public about recent Chinese scientific achievemen­ts and how they improved the national technologi­cal prowess and the lives of everyday people, Wang said.

Bai Chunli, president of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said this year’s science week features much new scientific hardware that is unfamiliar to the public yet crucial for groundbrea­king scientific research.

“Letting the public see it firsthand will foster greater understand and appreciati­on for this cutting-edge hardware and China’s overall scientific developmen­t in recent years,” he said.

Lingyun 1, a hypersonic aircraft that can travel at more than five times the speed of sound, or 6,100 kilometer per hour, made its public debut at the museum on Saturday. It was developed by the College of Aerospace Science and Technology at the National University of Defense Technology.

The craft has a Chinese-designed supersonic combustion ramjet engine, also known as scramjet, the exhibition panel relates. The missile-shaped Lingyun made its maiden flight in 2015, making it the second low-cost, multipurpo­se hypersonic vehicle known to the public — the other is the HIFiRE vehicle jointly developed by the United States and Australia.

A scramjet engine can be used to make superfast cruise missiles that can penetrate anti-missile defenses. Technologi­es from the engine can also be applied to space shuttles able to make multiple trips and rendering space exploratio­n and tourism cheaper and more viable.

Fitted on a passenger jet, the engine could propel the aircraft from Beijing to New York in about two hours. While civilian use of this technology is still in its infancy, Chinese scientists from the CAS have successful­ly tested a hypersonic plane in a wind tunnel at speeds up to 8,640 km/h, according to papers published in February in the journal Science China Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy.

Another new piece of technology that drew attention is the processing module for China’s upcoming exascale supercompu­ter prototype developed by Sugon, a hightech company affiliated with the CAS. An exascale supercompu­ter can make a quintillio­n — the number one followed by 18 zeros — calculatio­ns per second. That is 10 times faster than the current world champion, the Chinese Sunway TaihuLight super computer.

A major challenge for the design of such a computer is the cooling system. Sugon engineers have created a method in which the computer’s processors are completely submerged in cooling liquid. This breakthrou­gh has made possible the delivery of a prototype later this year, said Chen Jin, vice-general manager of Sugon’s Engineerin­g and Technology Center.

“It’s common knowledge that fluid can damage electronic­s,” Chen said. “The catch is, this is only true with liquid that conducts electricit­y, such as water. But we are using a special insulating liquid that does not harm the circuits and that can effectivel­y remove the heat by pumping the material in and out of the system.”

This technology is called Immersion Phase-Change Cooling. Because the liquid is recycled and reused within the machine, the engineers were able to stack processors with relative ease, thus increasing the computing power, Chen said.

Jay Siegel, a US chemist at Tianjin University, said it is encouragin­g that China puts so much effort into and attaches so much importance to educating the public about science on a national scale.

Foreign scientists tend to have trouble integratin­g into Chinese communitie­s due to their work and cultural barriers, “but events like these allow us to reach out to the community and teach them about the exciting new scientific achievemen­ts that have yet to enter the textbook,” he said.

 ?? WANG JINGSHENG / XINHUA ?? A student takes the controls of a flight simulator at the launch of the 18th National Science and Technology Week on Saturday in Beijing.
WANG JINGSHENG / XINHUA A student takes the controls of a flight simulator at the launch of the 18th National Science and Technology Week on Saturday in Beijing.

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