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China publishes standards on stem cell use
Source: Xinhua| 2017-11-22 21:07:21|Editor: liuxin



BEIJING, Nov. 22 (Xinhua) -- A general standard on research in stem cell technology was published in China on Wednesday.

The document introduces general requirements on screening of donors, tissue collection, cell separation and preservation, transportation and detection of stem cells.

The general requirements will safeguard the interest of donors and promote standardized development of the sector, according to Zhou Qi, head of the stem cell branch of the Chinese Society of Cell Biology, which led the compilation of the standard.

The standard will contribute to research on differentiation of stem cells, said Zhou, adding that a more detailed national standard will be published at a later date.
 
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High-tech Chinese lab to boost marine research
By Xie Chuanjiao in Qingdao, Shandong | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-11-20 17:45

A new lab to be built in eastern China will combine supercomputing and big data research to provide technical support for global marine research.

The Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, Inspur Group, the National Supercomputer Center, and Peking, Tsinghua and Shandong universities signed an agreement to launched the project on Saturday.

"Marine research needs support from supercomputers, while the development of supercomputing is driven by its application in marine research," said Wu Lixin, head of the Qingdao lab's executive committee. "The joint laboratory will better serve ocean observation, analysis and forecasts."

The Qingdao lab is home to the world's fastest supercomputer for marine research, and by 2020 it aims to develop an exascale supercomputer capable of running at least 1 quintillion (1 followed by 18 zeros) floating-point calculations per second.

Also on Saturday, the Qingdao lab signed a strategic cooperative agreement with two national supercomputing centers, in Jinan and Wuxi, to establish a "supercomputing group". A deal was also agreed with China Telecom and the China Education and Research Network to support connections between the three partners.

"All parities — the joint lab, supercomputing group and telecom companies — will contribute to constructing a high-resolution simulator for global oceanic systems," said Wei Zhiqiang, vice-executive director of the joint lab project.

Building the simulator is one of the goals of the international lab operated by Qingdao National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology, the US-based National Center for Atmospheric Research, and Texas A&M University.
 
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Mysterious deep-Earth seismic signature explained
Wednesday, November 22, 2017

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Washington, DC— New research on oxygen and iron chemistry under the extreme conditions found deep inside the Earth could explain a longstanding seismic mystery called ultralow velocity zones. Published in Nature, the findings could have far-reaching implications on our understanding of Earth’s geologic history, including life-altering events such as the Great Oxygenation Event, which occurred 2.4 billion years ago.

Sitting at the boundary between the lower mantle and the core, 1,800 miles beneath Earth’s surface, ultralow velocity zones (UVZ) are known to scientists because of their unusual seismic signatures. Although this region is far too deep for researchers to ever observe directly, instruments that can measure the propagation of seismic waves caused by earthquakes allow them to visualize changes in Earth’s interior structure; similar to how ultrasound measurements let medical professionals look inside of our bodies.

These seismic measurements enabled scientists to visualize these ultralow velocity zones in some regions along the core-mantle boundary, by observing the slowing down of seismic waves passing through them. But knowing UVZs exist didn’t explain what caused them.

However, recent findings about iron and oxygen chemistry under deep-Earth conditions provide an answer to this longstanding mystery.

It turns out that water contained in some minerals that get pulled down into the Earth due to plate tectonic activity could, under extreme pressures and temperatures, split up—liberating hydrogen and enabling the residual oxygen to combine with iron metal from the core to create a novel high-pressure mineral, iron peroxide.

Led by Carnegie’s Ho-kwang “Dave” Mao, the research team believes that as much as 300 million tons of water could be carried down into Earth’s interior every year and generate deep, massive reservoirs of iron dioxide, which could be the source of the ultralow velocity zones that slow down seismic waves at the core-mantle boundary.

To test this idea, the team used sophisticated tools at Argonne National Laboratory to examine the propagation of seismic waves through samples of iron peroxide that were created under deep-Earth-mimicking pressure and temperature conditions employing a laser-heated diamond anvil cell. They found that a mixture of normal mantle rock with 40 to 50 percent iron peroxide had the same seismic signature as the enigmatic ultralow velocity zones.

For the research team, one of the most-exciting aspects of this finding is the potential of a reservoir of oxygen deep in the planet’s interior, which if periodically released to the Earth’s surface could significantly alter the Earth’s early atmosphere, potentially explaining the dramatic increase in atmospheric oxygen that occurred about 2.4 billion years ago according to the geologic record.

“Finding the existence of a giant internal oxygen reservoir has many far-reaching implications,” Mao explained. “Now we should reconsider the consequences of sporadic oxygen outbursts and their correlations to other major events in the Earth’s history, such as the banded-iron formation, snowball Earth, mass extinctions, flood basalts, and supercontinent rifts.”

Other team members including Jin Liu, Qingyang Hu, and Wendy L. Mao of Stanford University; Duckyoung Kim of the Center of High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research in China, Zhongqing Wu and Wenzhong Wang of University of Science and Technology of China; Yuming Xiao, Paul Chow, and Yue Meng of Carnegie’s High Pressure Collaborative Access Team; and Vitali B. Prakapenka of Center for Advanced Radiation Sources.

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The movement of seismic waves through the material of the mantle allows scientists to image Earth’s interior, just as a medical ultrasound allows technicians to look inside a blood vessel. Image is courtesy of Edward Garnero and Allen McNamara’s 2008 Science paper Structure and Dynamics of Earth’s Lower Mantle, provided with Garnero’s permission.

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This work is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Energy, the Deep Carbon Observatory, and the National Natural Science Foundation of China.


Mysterious deep-Earth seismic signature explained | Carnegie Institution for Science


Jin Liu, Qingyang Hu, Duck Young Kim, Zhongqing Wu, Wenzhong Wang, Yuming Xiao, Paul Chow, Yue Meng, Vitali B. Prakapenka, Ho-Kwang Mao & Wendy L. Mao. Hydrogen-bearing iron peroxide and the origin of ultralow-velocity zones. Nature (2017). DOI: 10.1038/nature24461

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Public Release: 22-Nov-2017
A huge hydrogen generator at the Earth's core-mantle boundary
Science China Press

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The oxygen and hydrogen cycling in the deep Earth.
Credit: ©Science China Press

Splitting water into hydrogen and oxygen is a major theme in the development of clean, abundant energy source. A new study lead by an international research group revealed that when water meets the iron core of the Earth, the extremely high pressures and temperatures existing at the core-mantle boundary can naturally cause water to split into hydrogen and a super oxidized iron dioxide. Both the released hydrogen and the retained oxygen in the dioxide have many far-reaching implications and consequences, including the behaviors of the core-mantle boundary as a huge hydrogen generator, the separation of the deep Earth's water and hydrogen cycles, and the accumulation of oxygen-rich patches.

The article, published in the National Science Review, is the result of an international collaboration among the Center for High Pressure Science and Technology Advanced Research (HPSTAR) in China and Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington, DC, and Department of Geosciences, Stanford University. They conducted high pressure-temperature experimental studies and theoretical calculations on the reaction between water and iron and probed the reaction products with synchrotron x-ray sources at the Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory. They observed a series of intermediate composition iron oxides and iron hydride, with the final product of hydrogen and the new super oxidized iron dioxide.

The authors argue that based on our knowledge of water in the slabs subducting into the deep interior as a result of plate tectonics movement, 300 million tons of water per year could be carried down and meet iron in the core. This could generate a great amount of free hydrogen at the core-mantle boundary, 2900 kilometers beneath the surface. Although such rich hydrogen source is far beyond our reach, its upward movements returning to the surface via various paths as free hydrogen, as carbon hydrides through reactions with carbon, as hydrides through reaction with nitrogen, sulfur, and halogens, or as water again after recombined with oxygen on the way up, will be key issues for understanding geochemistry of deep volatiles.

Furthermore, the authors point out that continuous accumulation of super oxidized iron dioxide at the core-mantle boundary throughout the Earth history may create sizable domains detectable by seismic probes. Such domains may stay at the core-mantle boundary indefinitely without disturbance. However, they are out-of-the-place in terms of their very oxidized chemistry in the very reduced environment near the iron core. In the events that they were overheated by the core, a massive amount of oxygen could be released and erupted to reach the surface, causing colossal episode such as the Great Oxidation Event 24 billion years ago that put oxygen into the atmosphere and enabled aerobic life form like us.

"This newly discovered water-splitting reaction at the middle Earth affects geochemistry from the atmosphere to the deep interior," said the lead-author Ho-kwang Mao. "Many previous theories need to be re-examined now."

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See the article: When water meets iron at Earth's core-mantle boundary
Ho-Kwang Mao, Qingyang Hu, Liuxiang Yang, Jin Liu, Duck Young Kim, Yue Meng, Li Zhang, Vitali B. Prakapenka, Wenge Yang, Wendy L. Mao
https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwx109

https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/4107791/When-water-meets-iron-at-Earth-s-core-mantle


A huge hydrogen generator at the Earth's core-mantle boundary | EurekAlert! Science News
 
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China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) Launched in Kunming Institute of Botany
Nov 23, 2017

The launching ceremony of the China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) was held on November 22, 2017, at Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences (KIB/CAS). Co-constructed by KIB and the Institute of Botany, Uzbekistan Academy of Sciences, the Garden is the world’s first Allium garden and is supposed to collect, conserve and exhibit over 90% Allium of world.

The Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) will be composed of two centers, namely the Kunming Center and Toshkent Center. Located in Kunming Botanical Garden, KIB, it covers an area of 3,700 square meters (5.5 acres) and is designed in line with circumstances to create a natural type landscape.

The garden (Kunming Center) is divided into the native species conservation area and flower border viewing area, while the latter is subdivided into three sectors based on the different use of Allium as edible, ornamental or medicinal plants. It will act as a supporting platform for Allium research, utilization and public education.

At the ceremony, representatives of relevant authorities and S&T organizations from both China and Uzbekistan inspected the pre-construction work as well as the planning layout of the Garden.

"The launching of the China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) is a great example that strengthens relationship among countries and regions along the Belt and Road Initiative," said Prof. SUN Hang, the director of KIB. Since the first MoU between the two parties signed in 2013, KIB has built strong partnership with the Institute of Botany, Uzbekistan Academy of Sciences.

CAO Jinghua, the director of Bureau of International Cooperation of CAS said: "Science and innovation not only holds the promise of solutions to complex scientific challenges in the development of the Belt and Road Initiative, but can also be of significant value to the upgrading of the capacity and quality of cooperation between China and other countries. I believe the China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) will show the great effort for construction of the Belt and Road Initiative."

"Allium, which has been long-standing and widely used worldwide, is an important economic plant distributed in China as well as in Central Asia along the Belt and Road countries and regions. The construction of China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) is one of the example the Belt and Road platform to promote innovation and international collaboration between China and Uzbekistan," said Dr. Tojibave Komiljon, director of Institute of Botany, Uzbekistan Academy of Sciences.

The genus Allium (Liliaceae) contains hundreds of species, including the cultivated onion, garlic, scallion, shallot, leek, and chives, many of them have the smell of garlic and are economically important as crops, medicinal or ornamental plants. The majority of over 500 Allium species are native to the Northern Hemisphere, while a few species are distribute in tropical and subtropical regions.

There are more than 100 Allium species (nearly 50% of which are endemic to China) that are mainly distributed in northwestern, southwestern and northeastern China. Uzbekistan is also an important origin and diversification center of Allium, which owns rich germplasm resources.

Up to now, over 100 Allium species have been introduced and bred in the China-Uzbekistan Allium Germplasm Nursery. The planning layout called for the conservation and breeding of at least 200 Allium species to be completed during the first phase of construction.

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To unveil the plaque for the China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) by CAO Jinghua & Komiljon TOJIBAEV (Image by KIB)



China-Uzbekistan Global Allium Garden (Kunming Center) Launched in Kunming Institute of Botany---Chinese Academy of Sciences
 
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Chinese scientists develop liquid metal 3D printing technique
CGTN
Published on Nov 25, 2017

Chinese scientists have worked out a new liquid metal 3D printer. The process takes place in a vat filled with self-healing hydrogels. Researchers with the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) are behind the new invention. The new method will be helpful in areas such as flexible electronic devices and quick production of intelligent systems.
 
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Bill Gates appointed as academician by Chinese Academy of Engineering
CGTN
2017-11-27 10:14 GMT+8

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Bill Gates, co-founder of the Microsoft Corporation, was appointed as academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering (CAE), the national academy announced on Monday.

Gates is one of the 18 international academicians added into the list this year.

The newly-appointed include experts from the UK, the US, Australia, Russia and Japan, and are expected to work in promoting the development of engineering and international cooperation, the academy said.
 
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Chinese company seeking titanium to reach the bottom of the sea
By Gong Zhe
2017-11-27 11:26 GMT+8

A Chinese state-owned company is building a titanium sphere that can carry humans to the deepest ocean, which is about 10,000 meters below sea level.

The company, Baoji Titanium Industry headquartered in northwestern China's Shaanxi Province, has set 2020 as the year to help Chinese people see the "true bottom of the sea" with naked eyes.

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The titanium sphere build by Baotai /Screenshot from CCTV

Why titanium?

The first time human reached the sea bottom dated back to 1960, when Trieste, a Swiss-designed, Italian-built "bathyscaphe" carried two people to the Challenger Deep near Guam in the Pacific. The measured depth was 10,911 meters, just three meters deeper than James Cameron's diving.

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The bathyscaphe Trieste /US National Ocean Service Photo‍

The sphere used to carry people on the Trieste was made of steel.

Canadian film director James Cameron, creator of Aliens, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Titanic and the 2007 movie sensation Avatar, reached 10,908 meters with a steel submersible to shoot his 2014 documentary Deepsea Challenge 3D.

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Cameron in a submersible that dived more than 10,000 meters deep in the Mariana Trench. /Screenshot from National Geographic

So why would the Chinese use titanium instead of steel? Deputy general manager of the company Wang Dingchun gave two reasons:

"The submersible will be used for 30 years. So it has to be corrosion resistant. Our company can make titanium alloy that's almost corrosion-free," Wang told CCTV.

"The elasticity of the metal is also important," he added. "It offers much better protection against the massive pressure deep in the sea [than steel]."

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Wang talks about the titanium sphere. /Screenshot from CCTV

Get the hard job done

China has many experienced companies that can process steel. But it's not the case for titanium.

"There's very little appliance of this metal in China," said Jia Shuaixiao, general manager of the company.

The engineers chose the hard way to build the sphere in order to make it more reliable.

"The traditional method of building a metal sphere is to first build the slices and then weld them together, resulting in many seams," Wang explained. "But we directly made two hemispheres, and weld only once. Thus the sphere will be more solid."

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Engineers at Baotai polishing a titanium hemisphere /Screenshot from CCTV

If the sphere survives the 2020 deep-sea exploration, it may give huge confidence to titanium processors across the country.
 
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China Top Think Tank Expanded with New Members
Nov 28, 2017

Sixty-one Chinese and 16 foreign scholars were recently inducted as members into the Academic Divisions of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), bringing total Chinese and foreign membership to 838 and 98, respectively.

This is the second-time membership cooptation since the Academy revised its charter to cut administrative interference. CAS elects new members every two years.

Among the 61 new members, 11 are from Division of Mathematics and Physics, nine from Division of Chemistry, 13 from Division of Life Sciences and Medical Sciences, 10 from Division of Earth Sciences, six from Division of Information Technical Sciences, and 12 from Division of Technological Sciences.

The average age of new members is 54.1, with the youngest at 46 and the eldest at 67. Three female scientists were among the group.

The 16 foreign scientists newly inducted into the Academy come from eight countries (one member is dual nationality). Two of them are Nobel laureates, Prof. Andre K. Geim of University of Manchester and Prof. James Fraser Stoddart of Northwestern University.

New foreign members also include Prof. Jerzy Duszynski of the Polish Academy of Sciences, the first CAS foreign member from Poland, Prof. Andre K. Geim of the University of Manchester, the first foreign member from Netherlands (with dual nationality of the Great Britain), and Prof. Shavkat Salikhov of Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry of the Uzbekistan Academy of Sciences, the first foreign member from Uzbekistan.

Foreign scientists who have made important contributions to the cause of science and technology in China and who enjoy high international academic standing may be nominated for CAS membership.

As the highest national academic title in science and technology, CAS membership is a lifelong honor. However, members also have a responsibility to model academic integrity and advance their fields.

The Academic Divisions of CAS play an important role as the top think tank involved in China’s economic and social development. The Academic Divisions produce dozens of consulting reports and suggestions on key issues every year, supporting state decision-making on economic and social development, national security and progress in science and technology.
 
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New 3D bio-printer makes mass production of tissues possible
Source: Xinhua| 2017-11-27 19:56:31|Editor: Xiang Bo



HANGZHOU, Nov. 27 (Xinhua) -- Chinese researchers have developed a 3D bio-printer that makes it possible to mass produce human tissue, including skin, cartilage and liver.

Measuring 1.6 meters long, 1 meter wide and 1.9 meters tall, the printer was developed by a research team led by Hangzhou Regenovo Biotechnology Co., Ltd.

"Mass production of medical materials as well as quality and safe printed products are two requirements for the clinical use of 3D printing," said the company's chairman, Xu Ming'en.

3D printing is not yet ubiquitous. Many bio-printers on the market remain too slow for mass production, or the printed products are not up to standards.

Xu said that the new printer, equipped with a variety of nozzles, can print more types of biological materials in a given period.

Different parts of the printer can control their own temperatures, ranging from minus 20 degrees Celsius to 260 degrees Celsius, to help preserve cell function and viability.

In addition, it has an infrared laser scanning head with micron-level accuracy, which can check the quality of the inner structure of products while printing, according to Wang Ling, associate professor with Hangzhou Dianzi University. Wang is also the developer of the scanning head.

The new 3D bio-printer will contribute to the clinical application of artificial tissues and organs. The 3D printed tissues and organs can also be used to test new medicines.
 
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China unveils new bomb disposal robot that can dismantle explosives
By Sun Wenyu (People's Daily Online) 16:41, November 28, 2017

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A new type of robot that can remove explosives fixed by screws and ropes was unveiled in China on Nov. 26, chinanews.com reported.

Unlike traditional explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) robots that require manual control, the new model is able to do the removal task by itself. It is the first of its kind in the world.

In addition, the new robot is also equipped with an explosion-proof tank to isolate the dismantled explosive.

Under traditional manual operation, EOD personnel are at risk during the detection, disposal, transfer, and destruction of explosives.

“With this robot, EOD personnel can operate at locations 100 meters away from the site,” said Xiangli Xiaojun, a researcher at an EOD test center of the Public Security Department of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

A dock to connect an interferometer is another highlight. Xiangli told chinanews.com that the interferometer must be turned on during removal in case the explosive detonates. This robot is the first robot to offer such a function.
 
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Russia, China to Pool Efforts to Develop Combined HIV Vaccine
© Sputnik/ Alexandr Kryazhev
13:56 24.11.2017(updated 14:09 24.11.2017)

Over 90% of HIV cases in Russia were caused by HIV-1 strains belonging to the East European variety of Subtype A that differed greatly from HIV-1 strains prevalent in West Europe and North America, as well as in African countries.


MOSCOW (RIA Novosti) — An agreement to this effect was reached at the 2nd Russian-Chinese Biomedical Cooperation International Forum, held as part of the One Belt, One Road initiative. The Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU) hosted the forum on November 11-16.

The combined vaccine includes a Russian DNA component and a Chinese protein (booster), Prof Andrei Kozlov of the SPbPU Molecular Virusology and Oncology Laboratory, told RIA Novosti.

In 1997, Prof. Kozlov's team participated in Russia's first program to develop an HIV vaccine. After analyzing the molecular epidemiology of an early stage of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Russia and other countries of the former USSR, the scientists obtained full-size genomes of HIV-1variants dominant in Russia.

Beijing Universities Offer HIV Self-Test Kits in Vending Machines

It was proved that during the 15 years of the epidemic development which started in 1995, the level of genetic diversity of the Subtype A strains remained low in Russia, making it possible to create a series of plasmids based on a cloned genome of Subtype A HIV-1strain, plasmids capable of expressing four HIV-1 genes in mammals' cells. This formed the basis of the first Russian DNA vaccine against HIV that passed Stage I of clinical tests.

"A DNA vaccine is a platform, on which we can build a number of vaccine candidates," Prof. Kozlov said. In his view, creating a concomitant HIV vaccine could become a powerful research project for Russian and Chinese scientists, who decided to pool their findings.

Speaking about the need for this kind of research, he cited statistics to the effect that there are between 700,000 and 1 million HIV-infected people in Russia.

"All these people should be provided with free medical treatment. Currently, however, only a quarter of this number get therapy at the cost of about 20 billion rubles and it will cost over 80 billion rubles to offer medication to every HIV-positive patient," he said, adding that the drugs had to be taken for life, but they did not lead to recovery and only made the disease chronic.

"Clearly, not a single country in the world can do without an HIV vaccine," he said in conclusion.

The 2nd Russian-Chinese Biomedical Cooperation International Forum held as part of the One Belt, One Road initiative is aimed at adapting and introducing new biomedical technologies. The SPbPU prioritizes precisely this field of research as part of Project 5-100.

The first forum, held in Shanghai in June 2017, was sponsored by the Russian General Consulate, the Shanghai Administration, the PRC Biomedical Association, and others. The initiative for it came from the SPbPU Mission in Shanghai and the PuE business incubator.

At that time, the Russian-Chinese Biomedical Cooperation Center was created to develop innovative medical technologies, materials, and equipment, and to train highly skilled personnel.


Russia, China to Pool Efforts to Develop Combined HIV Vaccine - Sputnik Internationa
 
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Chinese satellite detects mysterious signals in search for dark matter

2017-11-30 06:42 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

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Photo taken on Dec. 17, 2015 shows a Long March 2-D rocket carrying the Dark Matter Particle Explorer satellite blasting off. China's Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) has detected unexpected and mysterious signals in its measurement of high-energy cosmic rays, which might bring scientists a step closer to shedding light on invisible dark matter. (Xinhua/Jin Liwang)

China's Dark Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) has detected unexpected and mysterious signals in its measurement of high-energy cosmic rays, which might bring scientists a step closer to shedding light on invisible dark matter.

The satellite, also called Wukong, or Monkey King, has measured more than 3.5 billion cosmic ray particles with the highest energy up to 100 tera-electron-volts (TeV for short, corresponding to 1 trillion times the energy of visible light), including 20 million electrons and positrons, with unprecedentedly high energy resolution.

"DAMPE has opened a new window for observing the high-energy universe, unveiling new physical phenomena beyond our current understanding," said Chang Jin, chief scientist of DAMPE and vice director of the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).

The initial detection results were published in the latest issue of the academic journal, Nature.

"This is the first time a space experiment has reported a detailed and precise electron and positron spectrum up to about 5 TeV. In this energy range, we found some unexpected and interesting features. We have detected a spectral break at 0.9 TeV and a possible spike at 1.4 TeV," said Chang.

Precise measurement of cosmic rays, especially at the very high energy range, is important for scientists to look for traces of dark matter annihilation or decay, as well as to understand the most energetic astrophysical phenomena in the universe, such as pulsars, active galaxy nuclei and supernova explosions. "Our data may inspire some new ideas in particle physics and astrophysics," said Chang.

Dark matter, which cannot be seen or touched, is one of the great mysteries of science. Scientists calculate that normal matter, such as galaxies, stars, trees, rocks and atoms, accounts for only about 5 percent of the universe. However, about 26.8 percent of the universe is dark matter and 68.3 percent dark energy.

China sent DAMPE into an orbit of about 500 kilometers above the earth on December 17, 2015, to look for evidence of the annihilation or decay of dark matter particles in space.

DAMPE has the widest energy range coverage and the highest energy resolution of all the dark matter probes currently in space. Based on the satellite's data, scientists drew the cosmic ray electron and positron spectrum.

To their surprise, scientists found a break at around 0.9 TeV and a strange spike at around 1.4 TeV on the spectrum. "We never expected such signals," Chang said.

"The spike might indicate that there exists a kind of unknown particle with a mass of about 1.4 TeV," said Chang.

"All the 61 elementary particles predicted by the standard model of particle physics have been found. Dark matter particles are beyond the list. So if we find a new elementary particle, it will be a breakthrough in physics," he added.

"The spike is very unusual," said Fan Yizhong, deputy chief designer of the scientific application system of DAMPE. "The signals might have originated from either dark matter or pulsars. Even if they were from pulsars, it would be quite a strange astrophysical phenomenon that nobody had known before."

"However, the data of the strange signal are still not enough. We need to collect more data to make sure it's real," Chang said.

More than 100 Chinese scientists and engineers, together with those from Switzerland and Italy, took part in the development of DAMPE and the analysis of its data.

Researchers have ruled out the possibility that the unusual signals are caused by a malfunction of the satellite's detectors. Independent analyses from five different teams all came to the same conclusion, said Chang.

DAMPE's design life is three years, but as it is performing so well, scientists expect it to work much longer. "DAMPE will continue to collect data to help us better understand the anomaly and might bring dark matter out of the shadows," said Chang.

Nobel Laureate Samuel Chao Chung Ting, leader of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS-02) experiment on the International Space Station, said of DAMPE, "It's a very good experiment."

Bi Xiaojun, a particle physicist at the Institute of High Energy Physics of the CAS, said DAMPE's observations are important to help scientists better understand the origin of cosmic rays.

"The satellite's data on the spike at 1.4 TeV are still not enough to declare a physical discovery. If the signal can be confirmed with the accumulation of data, it would be of great significance," Bi said.

"That could be explained by either dark matter or an astrophysical source. If we use dark matter to explain it, dark matter would be different from what we thought before. It conforms to the popular dark matter model of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMP), but has some special features," Bi said.

Chen Hesheng, a CAS academician, said that even if a candidate dark matter particle is found, it still needs other experiments such as underground detection or collider experiments to confirm it, which would be difficult.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/11-30/282672.shtml

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