Scientific invention contest for students launched
Updated: 2015-05-07 14:51
By Sun Xiaochen(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||
Students demonstrate a wind-powered vehicle driven by electric fans simulating natural winds at the launch of the 2015 Solve for Tomorrow National Youth Scientific Innovation and Experiment Contest in Beijing on Wednesday. [Photo/Provided to China Daily] |
Can you imagine driving a wind-powered vehicle, which is made of recyclable materials, for your daily commute from your home to the office?
It may sound unrealistic but a prototype device invented by students competing in the "Solve for Tomorrow" National Youth Scientific Innovation and Experiment Contest suggests that more clean-energy vehicles such as a wind-driven car will be realities in the near future.
The device, invented by a group of students guided by Professor Gao Yunfeng from Tsinghua University, carried a 50kg passenger 10 meters forward, powered only by two electric fans simulating natural winds at the launch of this year's "Solve for Tomorrow" contest on Wednesday.
Initiated by the China Association for Science and Technology and the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League of China, the contest will kick off its third consecutive year in June with high school and college students competing at national preliminaries in five divisions: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Harbin and Chengdu.
The competition is composed of two sections, a challenge segment and a creative contest. In the challenge segment, students will be required to fulfill three assignments – smart transportation, wind power utilization and security protection – by making full use of a limited number of tools and resources.
In the creative contest, students have to demonstrate their inventions through 20 minutes of presentation, operation and question and answer sessions with the judges' panel, which includes renowned scholars, officials and notary officers.
This year's contest will for the first time stop grouping students by their age, allowing high school and college contenders to compete head-to-head.
After regional preliminaries, qualified teams will bring their ideas and working prototypes to the national final, which will be held at the China Science and Technology Museum in late November, to compete for prize money and a trip to the United States, sponsored by Samsung Electronics Co, for exchange on scientific research and invention.
A series of online and on-site scientific promotion activities and educational events will also be held during the contest, as well as lectures by experts.
- Innovation becomes new pillar of Sino-Germany cooperation
- Qingdao to open Int'l Software Convergence and Innovation Expo
- Innovation helps firms win rewards, buck downtrend in exports
- Policy options for the reform of institutional mechanism of logistics innovation (No 43, 2015)
- Basic approach towards accelerating logistics innovation development in China (No 42, 2015)
- China and Russia hold naval exercise
- Ten photos you don't wanna miss - May 12
- Students demonstrate new official anti-smoking gestures
- Wenchuan earthquake: Seven years on
- Ten photos you don't wanna miss - May 11
- Man successfully flies homemade plane
- Beautiful images capture amazing Tibet
- Russian daredevils scale Ping An building
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Spring Festival trends reflect a changing China |
Patent applications lead the world |
BC lures Chinese tourists |
Today's Top News
Anti-graft body stresses inspections at lower levels
Ex-official on 'most wanted' list is arrested
China, Belarus to boost relations at local level
French president calls for end to US embargo on Cuba
Cook says Apple in talks with Alibaba over Apple Pay in China
China urges Pentagon to 'rationally' view military strength
Japan should issue apology to Asian states, ex-PM says
Apple's Tim Cook debuts on Weibo with 200,000 followers
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |