Breaking 10:00 Five dead in apartment fire near Barcelona 09:40 Rapper Naps outlines defense in Paris hotel assault trial 09:30 Cambridge University returns Benin bronzes to Nigeria 09:30 Morocco considers smart farming shift in 2026 budget 09:06 Saudi and Emirati ambitions turn quiet competition into open rivalry 09:00 Hillary Clinton accuses Trump of ‘Cover-Up’ over Epstein files 08:50 China clean energy capacity surpasses fossil fuels for first time 08:47 Robert Duvall, versatile American film icon, dies at 95 08:35 Hasnae Taleb: the Moroccan woman making her mark in global high finance 08:30 Love Brand | Essou Taha among the favorite influencers in 2025 08:20 Former Wagner recruiters linked to sabotage attacks in Europe 08:00 Love Brand | Sidi Ali among the favorite brands in 2025 07:50 Poland closes two airports after Russian missile strikes 18:30 Judicial Reform: Adouls announce national strike on February 18–19 18:20 Musk says Tesla will lead global autonomous vehicle market 18:00 Social network X hit by outage 17:50 North Korea opens housing complex for families of soldiers killed in Ukraine 17:30 New hydrocarbon field discovered in Côte d’Ivoire 17:20 European natural gas falls to five week low on milder weather forecasts 17:00 Ticket sales open for Morocco–Paraguay friendly in Lens 16:50 Global markets rise ahead of US Iran nuclear talks in Geneva 16:30 HM king Mohammed VI orders the opening of new and restored mosques for Ramadan 16:20 Cuba revives 1990s rationing plan as US oil sanctions tighten 16:00 One administrator for 1,200 students: The human resources crisis alarms higher education 15:50 Kallas urges Europe to assert autonomy at Munich conference 15:34 Polish president backs nuclear deterrence amid Russia threat 15:30 Epstein case: searches target Jack Lang as he bids farewell to the Arab World Institute 15:20 Ukraine heads to Geneva for third US mediated peace talks 15:00 X hit by second major global outage in a month 15:00 Ksar El Kébir allows residents to return, but three districts remain closed 14:50 UK and Germany military chiefs issue rare joint call to rearm 14:30 Spanish police arrest fugitive wanted by Morocco 14:20 Eurozone finance ministers push to strengthen euro’s global role 14:00 Israeli producer Dana Eden found dead in Athens 13:55 Explosion in northwestern Pakistan kills 2, injures 17 13:50 Rabobank warns ECB euro liquidity plan could widen trade deficits 13:45 Kurdish authorities release 34 Australians linked to jihadists from Roj camp 13:30 Türkiye posts $4.9 billion budget deficit in January 13:20 India opens landmark AI summit as leading Global South host 13:00 Love Brand | La Cigogne among the favorite brands in 2025 12:50 Machado says Cuba and Nicaragua will follow after Venezuela’s fall 12:30 Train derails in Swiss Alps, authorities report possible injuries 12:20 Alisa Vainio sets Finnish record with Seville marathon win 12:00 French interior minister visits Algeria to restore security cooperation 11:50 Yen weakens after Japan GDP misses expectations 11:30 Love Brand | Fatehi Nora among the favorite public figures in 2025 11:29 European monarchies embrace gender-equal succession with female heirs 11:00 Turkish and UAE presidents reaffirm commitment to strengthening bilateral ties 10:30 Türkiye prepares new social media regulations to protect children 10:20 Charli XCX declares end of brat summer at Berlin premiere

China unveils world's most powerful hypergravity centrifuge

Thursday 01 January 2026 - 12:50
China unveils world's most powerful hypergravity centrifuge

China has surged ahead in hypergravity research with the delivery of CHIEF1900, a groundbreaking centrifuge that generates forces 1,900 times Earth's gravity. Built by Shanghai Electric Nuclear Power Group, the machine arrived at Zhejiang University on December 22 and is now being installed in the institution's underground research facilities. Once fully operational, it will eclipse all existing hypergravity centrifuges globally, including its predecessor CHIEF1300, which began operations in September at 1,300 times gravity.

This new record-breaker surpasses the previous benchmark set by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' facility in Vicksburg, Mississippi, which topped out at around 1,200 times gravity. By spinning at extreme speeds, CHIEF1900 enables scientists to compress decades of geological processes or massive disasters into mere minutes. Researchers can, for instance, subject a three-meter dam model to 100 times Earth's gravity to mimic stresses on a full-scale 300-meter structure.

Hangzhou's municipal government highlights how CHIEF1900 fills a critical gap in China's super-large hypergravity testing capabilities. The facility supports vital applications, from extracting resources in deep ocean floors and terrestrial depths to mitigating disasters, managing underground waste, and developing novel materials. Early tests with CHIEF1300 have already simulated powerful earthquakes to assess hydroelectric dam foundations' seismic resilience and modeled tsunami impacts on seabeds to inform offshore wind farm placements.

Both CHIEF1900 and CHIEF1300 reside 15 meters underground on Zhejiang University's campus to dampen vibrations, equipped with vacuum temperature-control systems to handle the intense heat from high-speed rotation. The sprawling CHIEF complex, approved in 2021 at a cost of $285 million, serves as an international research platform open to global universities, institutes, and industries. Led by chief scientist Chen Yunmin, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, it features three centrifuges, 18 onboard devices, and six experimental cabins.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.