
Chinese engineers bring artillery-launched drones from concept to life
drones capable of surviving the crushing load in a 155mm (6 inches) cannon shell.
Five live-fire trials at a western test base confirmed the drones endured launch forces exceeding 3,000 times their own weight – comparable to 35 adult African elephants on a person.
The advance centres on a pyrotechnic ejection mechanism co-developed by the Shaanxi Applied Physics and Chemistry Research Institute, the Chinese air force, and defence contractor Norinco.
This highly reliable but low-cost system orchestrates a sequence of precisely timed detonations to separate the drone from its
artillery shell mid-flight while shielding it from aerodynamic damage – all without electronic controls.
These drones can 'reach distances exceeding 10 kilometres (6.2 miles) in seconds, multiply flight range, significantly save power consumption and extend loiter time,' the team, led by senior engineer Huang Yunluan, wrote.
A look inside at the artillery-launched drone system. Photo: Shaanxi Applied Physics and Chemistry Research Institute
First proposed by Chinese military scientists in 2013, a cannon-launching design named Tianyan ('sky eye') gained attention in a new-concept aircraft competition, according to state-run China News Service.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba, Baidu lead China's AI cloud boom as market surges 55% to US$2.7 billion
Baidu and Alibaba Group Holding led the market for public cloud services supporting artificial intelligence in China last year, as the industry embraced 'disruptive innovations' towards generative and agentic AI, according to consultancy IDC. The mainland AI public cloud market reached 19.6 billion yuan (US$2.7 billion) in 2024, increasing 55 per cent on the back of surging demand for AI training and applications, IDC said on Monday. The top two market players each accounted for roughly 25 per cent of the market, followed by Tencent Holdings and Huawei Technologies, according to a chart that did not provide exact share numbers. Alibaba owns the Post. 'Disruptive innovations' in AI drove the surge in the market, IDC said. Before 2022, demand for AI cloud services came from 'traditional' applications, including optical character recognition, quality inspection and surveillance. Starting in 2023, large language models – the technology underpinning ChatGPT-like chatbots – began to dominate the market. AI services were now evolving into agentic forms in the second half of this year, marking a new era of autonomous, task-oriented AI interactions, the report said. These shifts have prompted growing demand for AI cloud services, which can provide both generative-AI applications and training resources for clients to build their own AI services. Among five segments within AI cloud services, the biggest was computer vision, which rose 34 per cent to 8.1 billion yuan last year, led by Tencent and Baidu, IDC data showed.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China's latest weapons on show, Beijing slams US on human rights: SCMP daily highlights
Catch up on some of SCMP's biggest China stories of the day. If you would like to see more of our reporting, please consider subscribing European envoys in Beijing are discussing plans to skip China's massive military parade next month after considering the attendance of Russian President Vladimir Putin and the possible participation of Russian troops, the Post has learned. New hypersonic anti-ship missiles and a road-mobile intercontinental ballistic missile system were among a line-up of advanced Chinese weaponry seen on the streets of Beijing over the weekend. The research team grafted the dopamine-producing cells into depression-model mice. Photo: Shutterstock Chinese scientists have found a way to turn human stem cells into dopamine-producing brain cells, transplanting them into mice and helping reduce depressive behaviour and boost pleasure.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
How is the EV industry driving China's ‘going global' strategy?
The electric vehicle (EV) industry, formerly one of China's most inward-focused industrial sectors, is now leading a push overseas, carrying the government's hopes of forging an offshore economic empire to sidestep cutthroat competition at home. Advertisement Last year, for the first time, Chinese EV companies invested more overseas than they did at home, despite higher costs, delays and risks abroad, according to a report published by Rhodium Group on Monday. That marked a historic shift after years of directing around 80 per cent of investment to the domestic market, the research group said. The shift was made despite a hostile external climate, with the European Union and the United States tightening restrictions and stepping up scrutiny of China's 'going global' strategy. However, Chinese companies are contending with sagging demand and excess capacity at home, with an enervating price war eroding profit margins and leaving them little choice but to look abroad in search of growth. Overseas investment lagged far behind domestic spending before 2022, as policy support propelled China's annual EV supply chain investment to an average of US$92 billion in 2021 and 2022, the report said. The gap then began to close, and by 2024, foreign investment had edged past domestic outlays, which had fallen to just US$15 billion. Advertisement At home, factories assembling EVs were operating at just 49 per cent capacity in 2023 and battery factories at 36.5 per cent, the report said.