Thursday 7 July 2016

BAE Systems wants to grow military aircraft in chemical vats



Modern military aircraft are so complex that fighters like the F-35 Lightning II or the Typhoon take 20 years to go from drawing board to deployment at phenomenal costs. With design work already starting on next-generation fighters for the 2040s, BAE Systems and the University of Glasgow are looking at a faster, cheaper way to produce unmanned air vehicles (UAV), where they aren't constructed, but grown in computer-controlled chemical vats in a matter weeks.

.. Continue Reading BAE Systems wants to grow military aircraft in chemical vats

Category: Aircraft

Tags:
Chemistry
BAE Systems
Aircraft

Related Articles:
Hybrid polymer shows promise in self-repairing materials, smart drug delivery, and artificial muscles
New piston skirt coatings promise significant reduction in engine friction
1927 Nobel Prize in chemistry medal up for auction
ORNL's hybrid device combines microscopy and mass spectrometry
Material that thickens when stretched may lead to better body armor
Scientists create world's first fully-artificial molecular pump

No comments: