China unveils the world's most powerful hypergravity machine that generates 1,900 times Earth's gravity

Skye Jacobs

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What just happened? Deep beneath Zhejiang University in eastern China, scientists have switched on what is now the world's most powerful hypergravity machine – a massive centrifuge capable of producing forces 1,900 times stronger than Earth's gravity.

The new system, called CHIEF1900, was built by Shanghai Electric Nuclear Power Group as part of China's Centrifugal Hypergravity and Interdisciplinary Experiment Facility, or CHIEF. It follows the launch of CHIEF1300 only months earlier and quickly eclipses it in performance and capability.

Hypergravity centrifuges are tools used to study how extreme gravitational forces affect materials, structures, and biological systems. These experiments can reveal the way that plants and cells might behave in other planetary environments, or how large-scale civil engineering projects respond to stress.

CHIEF1900 surpasses the country's earlier CHIEF1300 model, which came online in September and temporarily held the record for the world's largest hypergravity machine. That title had belonged to the US Army Corps of Engineers in Vicksburg, Mississippi, whose centrifuge offers a capacity of about 1,200 g-tonnes.

The scale of difference is striking. While a household washing machine reaches about two g-tonnes at full spin, CHIEF1900 operates at 1,900 g-tonnes, multiplying Earth's gravity nearly two-thousandfold. The facility, buried about 50 feet underground to minimize vibration, was built with an estimated budget of about $285 million and is open to international researchers.

Scientists describe machines like CHIEF as tools for "compressing space and time." In practical terms, increasing gravity this way allows them to simulate large, long-term scenarios at a much smaller and faster scale.

A classic example in civil engineering is spinning a three-meter model of a dam wall at 100 g reproduces the same stress experienced by a 300-meter-high dam in the real world. By applying hypergravity, researchers can compress decades or even centuries of mechanical or geological processes into hours of data collection.

The applications span geotechnical research, environmental testing, and urban infrastructure planning. Scientists can model how pollutants spread through soil over millennia or how vibrations from high-speed trains interact with the ground – problems that would otherwise require impractically long observation periods.

Constructing CHIEF1900 demanded collaboration across multiple disciplines, including mechanical, civil, and environmental engineering. Scaling the centrifuge to this magnitude introduced new technical challenges, especially around motion control and thermal management.

At top rotational speeds, the spinning arms generate tremendous heat and mechanical stress. Engineers responded by designing a vacuum-based temperature control system that combines coolant circulation with air ventilation to stabilize performance.

The machine's precision and endurance depend on the careful balance of these systems. Even slight asymmetry or vibration could offset data accuracy or endanger the experiment.

The CHIEF project's rapid progression – from CHIEF1300 in September to CHIEF1900 by year's end – shows how quickly China is scaling up its experimental capabilities in physics and large-scale engineering. The facility aims to position Zhejiang University as a global hub for hypergravity studies, open to teams exploring fields from aerospace dynamics to environmental resilience.

Image credit: Interesting Engineering

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But can I float around in microgravity to restore power to it? Bah, this one exists within a gravity well.
 
Acceleration isn't gravity. Gravity IS an acceleration, yes, but there's no gravity being created here in any way, shape, or form. Remember:

F=ma
Force = mass*acceleration

Gravity is the "a" in measuring its FORCE upon an object, but only when it's assigned to the effect of gravity. All other accelerations are NOT gravity, by the definition of "other". This is just paltry marketing, and fraud.
 
There is already some manager trying to figure out how to get factory workers into an intense gravity field to slow time down so the workers productive will be higher.
Just put them into a book shop. I swear every one has a small black hole in the basement. It's the only way to explain why I can go into a book shop, spend 20 minutes inside, and come out two hours later.
 
Will soon receive reservations from data brokers, trying to squeeze the last drop of data from American customers. (But not Californians apparently).
 
Didn't that thing that span round to potentially launch things into space generate 10,000 times Earth gravity? SpinLaunch I think it was called.
 
Didn't that thing that span round to potentially launch things into space generate 10,000 times Earth gravity? SpinLaunch I think it was called.
Only if you consider marketing hype to be reality. SpinLaunch never actually made that launch machine. They have since moved entirely to satellites.
 
From now on, I'll refer to my washing machine as "hypergravity machine", because it's essentially the same thing - a centrifuge.
My hypergravity machine has some extras, like it can do the laundry, but the one described here will probably be upgraded at some point as well.
 
I was wondering if all the tech bros plus Trump can fit inside it's cabin? I mean, while it's off, because at 1900G I know all of them would fit nicely and confy inside it...

(btw, I'm just trying to imagine all of them inside it while it speeds up and then all of them start to liquify and mush in into a pudding of white supremacist people blending around into a multi eyed semi-liquid monstruosity with a maga hat and multi colored bad hair lines coming together with many mouths talking about how great AI is and how it's going to save humankind... - yeah I know that's not how real human bodies behave at high gravity levels but they too are not normal humans... also, one can dream)
 
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