Chinese Scientist Rejects 'Goddess' Label for BeiDou Work
Hızlı Bakış
- BeiDou scientist Xu Ying, 43, from Sichuan, rejects the 'goddess' label, emphasizing that scientific research is gender-neutral.
- She joined the BeiDou development team at 23 and is now part of a system competing with GPS.
Yapay zekâ özeti
Neden Önemli?
Xu Ying, a scientist involved in China's BeiDou Navigation Satellite System, has rejected the label 'goddess' given to her by some media. She emphasizes that scientific research is a pursuit that transcends gender. BeiDou is China's indigenous satellite navigation system and a competitor to the US GPS.
A Chinese scientist behind China’s BeiDou Navigation Satellite System rejects the “goddess” label, asserting that research transcends gender.
Xu Ying, 43, hails from Sichuan province in southwestern China, born to a maths teacher mother and an agricultural technician father.
As a gifted child with a passion for physics and mathematics, Xu began primary school at the age of four, entered university at 16 to pursue communications engineering, and consistently ranked at the top of her class each school term, according to reports from mainland sources.
At 20, she enrolled in a combined master’s and doctoral programme at the Beijing Institute of Technology, and three years later, she became part of the team developing BeiDou, China’s indigenous satellite navigation system.
Now a competitor to the US GPS and Russia’s GLONASS, BeiDou is utilised in transport, weather forecasting, disaster relief, and public safety, boasting cooperation agreements with 137 countries and regions.
Açık Sorular
- What specific media outlets or individuals have referred to Xu Ying as a 'goddess'?
- What are the specific details of Xu Ying's contributions to the BeiDou system?
- What is the current global adoption rate of BeiDou compared to GPS and GLONASS?
- What are the future development plans for the BeiDou system?




