China has built an 'artificial moon' research facility with a lunar-like low ...

China has built an 'artificial moon' research facility with a lunar-like low ...
China has built an 'artificial moon' research facility with a lunar-like low ...

Chinese scientists have built an 'artificial moon' that has lunar-like gravity and is designed to help them prepare astronauts for future exploration missions.

The low-gravity simulated environment was inspired by experiments that made use of magnets to levitate a frog, the South China Morning Post reported. 

The simulator is based Xuzhou in the Jiangsu province of China, and has been designed in a way that can 'make gravity disappear,' according to its designers. 

Currently, simulating low gravity on Earth requires flying in an aircraft that enters a free fall, then climbs back up, or falling from a drop tower, but that lasts minutes.

The new lunar simulator, which is a small 2ft room sitting in a vacuum chamber, can simulate low or zero gravity 'for as long as you want,' explained its developers.

Inside the 2ft room they have created an artificial lunar landscape, made up of rocks and dust that are as light as those found on the surface of the moon.

Chinese scientists have built an 'artificial moon' that has lunar-like gravity, that will help them prepare astronauts for future exploration of the moon

Chinese scientists have built an 'artificial moon' that has lunar-like gravity, that will help them prepare astronauts for future exploration of the moon

HOW IT WORKS 

The artificial moon uses very strong magnetic fields to 'levitate' a two square foot room in a vacuum.

The room is placed inside a vacuum chamber where no air is present.

Powerful magnets are used to generate a magnetic field inside the chamber that 'lifts' the small room.

Inside the room they have simulated lunar soil and moon rocks.

The magnetic field can be switched on or off as needed, producing no gravity, lunar gravity or Earth-level gravity.

Gravity on the moon is about a sixth the force of that on the Earth.

Being able to test devices and processes in a low-gravity environment can help reduce problems during a moon mission. 

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Gravity on the moon is about a sixth as powerful as that on Earth, and inside the artificial gravity room the team make use of a strong magnetic field to simulate the 'levitation effects' of a low gravitational force.

'Some experiments such as an impact test need just a few seconds,' said lead scientist Li Ruilin, from the China University of Mining and Technology, adding that 'others such as creep testing can take several days.'

The concept of using magnetic fields for levitation came from Russian physicist Andre Geim, who won an Ig Nobel prize in 2000 for making a frog float.

Geim works at the University of Manchester and went on to win a Nobel Prize in Physics in 2010 for work he did in the creation of graphene.  

He told the South China Morning Post that he was pleased to see his education experiments lead to applications in space exploration, explaining that 'magnetic levitation is not the same as antigravity.'

However, he said there were situations where mimicking microgravity using magnetic fields could be invaluable. 

China has set a goal of sending astronauts to the moon by 2030, and set up a base on the moon, in a joint project with Russia by the end of this decade. 

It is expected this 'artificial moon' will play an important role in future missions to the moon, allowing

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