War By Other Means: China Won’t Fight America Like You Expect
Why risk major combat over, say, a Taiwan contingency if you can slow down the U.S. Pacific Fleet and associated joint forces long enough to conquer the island, and hand the U.S. Navy a fait accompli when its task forces arrive on scene?
Here s What You Need to Know: Sage PLA strategists will craft tactics to disrupt those information links or disable them altogether. Fragment the enemy network and you can fall on the fragments and eradicate them one by one. Or, better yet, if the PLA can sow paralysis in an enemy system-of-systems for long enough to accomplish its goals, then it may not need to bother trying to annihilate individual units.
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WEST LAFAYETTE â The Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization has awarded more than $130,000 to four projects led by researchers in Purdue Universityâs College of Engineering and its College of Science, and Purdue University Northwestâs College of Engineering and Sciences.
The Trask Innovation Fund supports short-term projects that enhance the commercial value of Purdueâs intellectual property.
Brooke Beier, vice president of the Office of Technology Commercialization, explained how the Trask Innovation Fund complements activity done by OTC personnel.
âResearchers at Purdue University campuses disclose their innovative work to OTC throughout the year. Sometimes it needs support to move from concept or even a first prototype to a more mature, proven innovation,â Beier said. âTaking that step strengthens OTCâs ability to apply for IP protection, market and even license innovations so they can r
Reimagining hydrogen, imaging, databases and oil purdue.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from purdue.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
All-in-one device uses microwave power for defense, medicine
An invention from Purdue University innovators may provide a new option to use directed energy for biomedical and defense applications. (Stock image)
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – An invention from Purdue University innovators may provide a new option to use directed energy for biomedical and defense applications.
The Purdue invention uses composite based nonlinear transmission lines (NLTLs) for a complete high-power microwave system, eliminating the need for multiple auxiliary systems. The interest in NLTLs has increased in the past few decades because they offer an effective solid-state alternative to conventional vacuum-based, high-power microwave generators that require large and expensive external systems, such as cryogenic electromagnets and high-voltage nanosecond pulse generators.