Breaking
FRCanicule : des records de température battus, 49 départements en vigilance rouge lundiFRCanicule : 845 écoles fermées et 1.800 autres aménagent leurs horaires lundi en FranceFRÉthiopie : le parti d'Abiy Ahmed remporte largement les législativesFREspagne-Arabie Saoudite : la Roja se rassure et s'impose largementFRDix ans après le Brexit, le "Bregret" domine au Royaume-UniFRAffaire Étienne Klein : le plagiat dans la recherche scientifiqueFRLes Bleus à Philadelphie, Mbappé en conférence, Yamal titulaire : le point sur le MondialFRNégociations Iran-États-Unis en Suisse : tensions et espoirsFRCanicule : la SNCF recommande aux voyageurs vulnérables d'éviter le trainFRKeir Starmer sous pression : son avenir à Downing Street incertainFRCanicule : des records de température battus, 49 départements en vigilance rouge lundiFRCanicule : 845 écoles fermées et 1.800 autres aménagent leurs horaires lundi en FranceFRÉthiopie : le parti d'Abiy Ahmed remporte largement les législativesFREspagne-Arabie Saoudite : la Roja se rassure et s'impose largementFRDix ans après le Brexit, le "Bregret" domine au Royaume-UniFRAffaire Étienne Klein : le plagiat dans la recherche scientifiqueFRLes Bleus à Philadelphie, Mbappé en conférence, Yamal titulaire : le point sur le MondialFRNégociations Iran-États-Unis en Suisse : tensions et espoirsFRCanicule : la SNCF recommande aux voyageurs vulnérables d'éviter le trainFRKeir Starmer sous pression : son avenir à Downing Street incertain
Newsgather
BackBreakthrough Helicopter-Borne Geophysical Survey System Successfully Tested
Breakthrough Helicopter-Borne Geophysical Survey System Successfully Tested
Science
SCMP News6/9/2026Science1 min readChina

Breakthrough Helicopter-Borne Geophysical Survey System Successfully Tested

Chinese Researchers Overcome Stability Challenge in Airborne Multi-Coil Technology

Quick Look

Chinese scientists led by Fu Jingcheng achieve stable flight of a helicopter-towed, kite-like array of coils for advanced geophysical surveys, enabling material identification and depth analysis via induced eddy currents.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Geophysical surveys are crucial for mineral exploration and geological mapping, with airborne technologies offering efficient large-scale data collection.

Font size

At an undisclosed test site, a helicopter takes off, towing a kite-like array of massive coils. When the pulse is turned off, the magnetic field induces tiny, decaying “eddy currents” in any conductive material it hits. These currents, in turn, create their own secondary magnetic field, which is picked up by a receiver coil. By analysing the strength and decay rate of this secondary signal, scientists can determine not only that something is there, but what it might be and how deep it is. The results of this groundbreaking flight test were revealed in a paper published in the Chinese journal Acta Aeronautica et Astronautica Sinica on April 25. Led by associate professor Fu Jingcheng of Beihang University and the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Geology and Geophysics, the study solves a formidable engineering puzzle: how to keep a complex, multi-coil airborne system perfectly stable during flight for geophysical surveys.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Widespread adoption of the technology in Chinese geological surveys within the next 2 years

    Likely · Within years

Open Questions

  • Future applications of the technology
  • International collaboration prospects

Related Topics

This article was originally published by SCMP News.

Related Stories

More on this topicgeophysical survey