News on China's scientific and technological development.

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
Even it is manufactured in China, doesn't mean China has the technology, the technology is owned by the USA

Believe me embargo will never work. Whoever do it will only shoot their own foot.

At onetime US has a thriving CNC machinery manufacturer. Name like Cincinnati Milacron used to be standard. But they were prevented from exporting to China because because of Wassenaar treaty.

The intent was to slow the growth of Chinese military since CNC is used to machine quiet propeller and turbine blade

Fastforward 20 years and now China has thriving CNC manufacturer Together with Taiwan they control 50% of the world market.

There are only 2 or 3 CNC manufacturer left in US. And all of them are struggling now

It will applied equally well to Electronic industry If US doesn't sell the technology somebody else will
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
Believe me embargo will never work. Whoever do it will only shoot their own foot.

At onetime US has a thriving CNC machinery manufacturer. Name like Cincinnati Milacron used to be standard. But they were prevented from exporting to China because because of Wassenaar treaty.

The intent was to slow the growth of Chinese military since CNC is used to machine quiet propeller and turbine blade

Fastforward 20 years and now China has thriving CNC manufacturer Together with Taiwan they control 50% of the world market.

There are only 2 or 3 CNC manufacturer left in US. And all of them are struggling now

It will applied equally well to Electronic industry If US doesn't sell the technology somebody else will

I can't agree more. Regarding CNC, yes China now produces more than any other country, but China mainly produces low end to medium end product, and recently able to produce 7 axis CNC machine.

China still import a lot of super high end CNC machines from Japan and Germany.

I guess American CNC manufacturers produces super high end product only, because they simply can not compete with Chinese made CNC
 

AssassinsMace

Lieutenant General
This debate is pretty pointless unless one is claiming China will never have it. It's only a matter of time and money. So unless the established powers want to go to war with China to stop all advancement, time is on China's side. China is not suppose to be where it's at now if we believe what the experts believed 20 to 30 years ago. China will continue to disappoint the pessimists.
 

Martian

Senior Member
Search for dark matter moves one step closer to detecting elusive particle

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Hanguo Wang (Credit: Reed Hutchinson/UCLA)

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"Search for dark matter moves one step closer to detecting elusive particle
April 15, 2011

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Katsushi Arisaka (left), holding QUPID, and Hanguo Wang
(Credit: Reed Hutchinson/UCLA)

(PhysOrg.com) -- Dark matter, the mysterious substance that may account for nearly 25 percent of the universe, has so far evaded direct observation. But researchers from UCLA, Columbia University and other institutions participating in the international XENON collaboration say they are now closer than ever before.

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at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy, where the XENON experiment is housed deep beneath a mountain 70 miles west of Rome, represent the highest-sensitivity search for dark matter yet, with background noise 100 times lower than competing efforts.

Dark matter is widely thought to be a kind of massive elementary particle that interacts weakly with ordinary matter. Physicists refer to these particles as WIMPS, for weakly interacting massive particles. The XENON researchers used a dark-matter detector known as XENON100 — an instrumented vat filled with over 100 pounds of liquid xenon — as a target for these WIMPs, which are thought to be streaming constantly through the solar system and the Earth.

And while the XENON100 experiment found no dark matter signal in 100 days of testing, the researchers' newly calculated upper limits on the mass of WIMPs and the probability of their interacting with other particles are the best in the world, said UCLA physics professor Katsushi Arisaka, a member of the international collaboration.

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Seven QUPIDs (QUartz Photon Intensifying Detectors), a new photon-detector technology that emits no radiation and will greatly reduce background noise in future dark matter searches. (Credit: Katsushi Arisaka)

XENON100 looks for a primary flash of light that occurs when a particle bounces off a xenon atom inside the detector and a secondary flash when an electron knocked free from a xenon atom by a collision is accelerated toward the top of the device by an electric field, said UCLA physics researcher Hanguo Wang, who works closely with Arisaka. With this configuration, a WIMP will generate a signal fundamentally different from that of cosmic radiation or emission from the equipment itself, making it possible to identify background readings that could be mistaken for a positive detection, he said.

Even though the experiment did not detect a WIMP, the progress sets the stage for an ambitious next-generation project called XENON1T, which will use a much larger, one-ton liquid xenon instrument with highly specialized light-detectors developed at UCLA that make it 100 times more sensitive than XENON100, said David Cline, a UCLA professor of physics and founder of UCLA's dark matter group.

The search for dark matter

Ordinary matter, which makes up the stars, planets, gas and dust in our galaxy, emits or reflects light that can be observed using telescopes on Earth or in space. However, the effect of dark matter, according to several theories, can be observed only indirectly by the gravitational force exerted on the more visible portions of the galaxy around us, Cline said.

Despite the differences between ordinary and dark matter, cosmologists believe the two have been linked since the beginning of the universe, with dark matter playing a key role in the coalescing of particles into stars, galaxies and other large-scale structures after the Big Bang.

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The XENON100 experiment is located deep underground at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy to reduce contaminating signals from cosmic radiation. (Credit: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation)

Though dark matter exerts a tangible force on the galaxy as a whole, individual WIMPs have proved far more difficult to detect. Because these particles interact only very weakly with normal matter, the small signal that might come from a WIMP detection above ground would be drowned out by the cosmic radiation that constantly bombards Earth's surface, Cline said.

To eliminate the majority of this background noise, the XENON100 experiment is buried beneath almost one mile of rock in the Gran Sasso lab, the largest underground facility of its kind in the world. While dark matter particles can travel easily through the vast expanse of stone and pass through the detector, only the most energetic particles from space are able to follow, Arisaka said.

Next steps

Because the XENON100 experiment is shielded by large amounts of rock, as well as by several tons of copper, lead and water, the largest source of background detections is actually the radiation coming from the instrument itself, Arisaka said.

In an effort to address this issue, Arisaka and Wang, working in collaboration with Hamamatsu Photonics in Japan, have developed the Quartz Photon Intensifying Detector (QUPID), a new light-detector technology that emits no radiation. The XENON group hopes to incorporate this breakthrough technology into the future XENON1T experiment.

"We have developed a detector to be used in future experiments based on new photon-detector technology," Wang said. "We invented, tested and demonstrated its operation in liquid xenon in our laboratory at UCLA."


In addition to Arisaka, Cline and Wang, UCLA's XENON group includes postdoctoral scholars Emilija Pantic and Paolo Beltrame and graduate students Artin Teymourian and Kevin Lung. Two students, Ethan Brown and Michael Lam, received doctorates last year through this experiment.

Elena Aprile, a professor of physics at Columbia University, is the XENON collaboration's principal investigator and spokesperson.

The XENON collaboration consists of 60 scientists from 14 institutions in the U.S. (UCLA, Columbia University, Rice University); China (Shanghai Jiao Tong University); France (Subatech Nantes); Germany (Max-Planck-Institut Heidelberg, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, Willhelms Universität Münster); Israel (Weizmann Institute of Science); Italy (Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso, INFN e Università di Bologna); the Netherlands (Nikhef Amsterdam); Portugal (Universidade de Coimbra); and Switzerland (Universität Zürich).

XENON100 is supported by its collaborating institutions and federally funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy, as well as by the Swiss National Foundation; France's Institut national de physique des particules et de physique nucléaire and La Région des Pays de la Loire; Germany's Max-Planck-Society and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; Israel's German-Israeli Minerva Gesellschaft and GIF; the Netherlands' FOM; Portugal's Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia; Italy's Instituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare; and China's STCSM.

Provided by University of California Los Angeles"
 
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Schumacher

Senior Member
China's contribution to the Royal Navy's new carriers.

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"04 Mar 11

THE UK’s largest crane passed under the iconic Forth Rail Bridge on Thursday, March 3, on its way to Babcock’s Rosyth Dockyard in Fife.

The crane, which has been Christened “Goliath”, arrived at 7.30am after a sea voyage from Shanghai, where it was specially constructed by Shanghai Zhenhua Port Machinery (ZPMC).

Goliath left Shanghai on December 17 last year on a specialist crane transport vessel which traversed 14,000 nautical miles to deliver it to its new home in Rosyth.

The crane’s delivery is a significant milestone in the assembly of the Royal Navy’s new Queen Elizabeth Class aircraft carriers. The component parts of the carriers are being built at yards across the UK, but will be put together at Rosyth Dockyard....................................."
 

broadsword

Brigadier
The Goliath Crane
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It has the capacity to lift 1,000 tonnes and has been two years in construction.
 
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Martian

Senior Member
TSMC eyes seven nanometre process

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Intel, Samsung and TSMC have reached an agreement on the need for industry-wide collaboration to target a transition to larger, 450mm-sized wafers starting in 2012. (Source:
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"TSMC eyes seven nanometre process
Announces 20 nm production for 2012
26 Apr 2011 10:30 | by Matthew Finnegan in London | posted in Chips

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) has confirmed that pilot production of its 20 nanometre process will begin in the second half of 2012.

The firm’s senior vice president in charge of R&D, S.Y. Chiang announced that its first foray into 450 millimetre wafer production would occur late next year, following on from the 28 nm pilot production in the second quarter of this year.

Chiang also noted that TSMC would begin its volume production phase of the 28 nm technology towards the end of 2011, producing more than twice as many chips as the 40 nm process
, with IC designs being finalised this year.

All of which fits in with Moore’s Law, stating that the numbers of transistors will roughly double every eighteen months since the 1965 invention of integrated circuits. But semiconductor expert Malcolm Penn said that TSMC’s announcement about the new process is “like saying Christmas will be happening in December this year”.

With regards to future adherence to Moore’s Law, Chiang estimates that the rule will remain applicable to the semi industry until at least when the seven nanometre process comes into production.

Chiang also predicted that the room for cooperation between both silicon foundries and chip assemblers will increase as the size of single chips and system chips continues to be scaled down.

Penn agrees that the shrinking of process size will continue up until the seven nanometre threshold, where the way that the physics involved in the circuits begins to change.

“At this point it becomes a different ball game,” Penn said, “with molecular level circuits and talk of single atom transistors as the physics change from here on out.”

This is where new developments in graphene based circuitry, spintronics and other exotic developments which are occurring in labs at early stages of research come into play.

Such technologies are a good while from becoming viable in production on a large level, but Penn believes we have around ten to fifteen years before the 7 nm process is reached.


Up until then, though, Penn believes that progression should remain steady, with the step on the horizon being 16 or 14 nm, 'depending on what your marketing department decides as they are both pretty much exactly the same.'”
 
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Red___Sword

Junior Member
It is true, some heavy metal atom itself is bigger than 7nm.

Use of superconductor application science to solve the current "big size" circuit power consumption problem, I guess.
 
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