China’s new sky train LEVITATES on a magnetic track 33 feet in the air and doesn’t need electricity
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China’s new ‘sky train’ LEVITATES on a magnetic track 33 feet in the air and can glide along silently at speeds of up to 50 mph without electricity
- The Red Rail is the first suspended maglev line built with permanent magnets rather than electromagnets
- This means it is more efficient, with only a small amount of electricity needed to propel the train
- The suspended rail operates 33 feet above the ground with the train moving beneath it at speeds of 50mph
- The technological feat is possible due to an abundance of rare earth elements in China
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China is well known for its futuristic maglev trains, which use electromagnets to propel the vehicles over tracks at high speeds.
Now the country has unveiled its first suspended maglev line built with permanent magnets, which engineers claim can keep a ‘sky train’ afloat even without a power supply.
The 2,600ft experimental track, known as the Red Rail, is located in Xingguo county, Jiangxi province, in southern China.
It uses powerful magnets to produce a constantly repelling force strong enough to lift a train with 88 passengers into the air, according to a report in the South China Morning Post.
Unlike most existing maglev lines, the suspended rail operates about 33 feet above the ground. There is no physical contact with the rail as the train moves beneath it silently at speeds of up to 50mph.
China has unveiled its first suspended maglev line built with permanent magnets, which engineers claim can keep a ‘sky train’ afloat even without a power supply
The 2,600ft experimental track, known as the Red Rail, is located in Xingguo county, Jiangxi province, in southern China
The use of permanent magnets rather than electromagnets, as well as the lack of friction with the track, means that only a small amount of electricity is needed to propel the train.
The track generates much less electromagnetic radiation than traditional maglev lines, which can affect the environment and health of people living nearby.
It is also much cheaper to build, with construction costing only about a tenth of that needed to build a subway, according to researchers at Jiangxi University of Science and Technology.
The technological feat is possible due to an abundance of rare earth elements in China, which are needed to make the train’s permanent magnets.
Adding rare earth elements to magnets significantly increases their lifespan. Neodymium, for instance, can reduce the loss of magnetism to less than 5 per cent in a century.
China is home to nearly 40 per cent of the entire world’s known reserves of rare earth elements – twice as much as its neighbour Vietnam in second place.
It also mines far more of these metals than any other country – with just six state-run Chinese companies producing 85 per cent of the world’s refined rare earths in 2020.
Local transport authorities are currently testing Red Rail on the half-mile stretch of track in Xingguo, but are planning to increase this to 4.7 miles when initial tests are complete.
The maximum speed of most domestic underground lines is generally capped at 50mph but a permanent magnet maglev train, driven entirely by AI, could reportedly reach speeds of up to 75mph.
The use of permanent magnets rather than electromagnets, as well as the lack of friction with the track, means that only a small amount of electricity is needed to propel the train
It uses powerful magnets to produce a constantly repelling force strong enough to lift a train with 88 passengers into the air
Last year, China unveiled the prototype of a super-fast bullet train that engineers said could reach 385mph.
Dubbed the ‘super bullet maglev train’, it boasts more than twice the speed of the Eurostar fleet and could cover the distance between London and Paris in 47 minutes with its maximum speed.
It uses high-temperature superconducting (HTS) maglev technology, different from the low-temperature technology employed by Germany and Japan in their maglev trains, according to experts from Southwest Jiaotong University.
The team claims that the Chinese version is more lightweight with a simpler structure. It is also cheaper to manufacture and operate.
The engineers consider the HTS technology more suitable for the futuristic ‘vacuum transportation’, which could see ultra-high-speed maglev trains zipping in vacuum tubes in speeds over 1,000 kilometres (621 miles) per hour.