2026年4月9日 星期四

AI Overview 2026Three-dimensional (3D) printing, or additive manufacturing, is rapidly transforming the defense industry by enabling faster, cheaper, and more decentralized production of military hardware.New 3D printer at Weill Cornell Medicine has the potential to revolutionize medicine

AI Overview 2026Three-dimensional (3D) printing, or additive manufacturing, is rapidly transforming the defense industry by enabling faster, cheaper, and more decentralized production of military hardware.New 3D printer at Weill Cornell Medicine has the potential to revolutionize medicine

AI Overview
Three-dimensional (3D) printing, or additive manufacturing, is rapidly transforming the defense industry by enabling faster, cheaper, and more decentralized production of military hardware. As highlighted by CNN, companies like Divergent Technologies are utilizing advanced 3D printing to create military components, such as missile airframes and combat vehicle parts, at a fraction of the cost and time of traditional methods.
Key Defense Applications of 3D Printing
  • Manufacturing Hardware: Companies are producing advanced metallic and composite structures, including "low-cost" missile airframes that can be manufactured at high speed for defense applications.
  • Rapid Deployment: The U.S. Army has tested printing weapons like grenade launchers (R.A.M.B.O.) and is researching 3D-printed drone manufacturing in the field, allowing for overnight production and repair.
  • Field Support: 3D printing can create on-site replacements for damaged equipment, reducing the logistical burden of transporting spare parts to war zones.
  • Infrastructure Reconstruction: In war zones like Ukraine, projects are using 3D printing to build structures, including schools and shelters.
Key Concerns and Challenges
  • Undetectable Firearms: A major concern raised in various reports is the ability to print firearms, such as "The Liberator" pistol, which is made from plastic and could potentially bypass metal detectors, leading to regulatory crackdowns.
  • Regulation and Security: The distribution of digital files (blueprints) for printing weapons online has created significant regulatory challenges for governments attempting to control the spread of these arms.
Future Outlook
The technology is moving beyond plastic to advanced metals, allowing for structural parts and complex systems to be fabricated rather than assembled. This, according to defense industry experts, is reshaping manufacturing and enhancing logistics resilience.


New 3D printer at Weill Cornell Medicine has the potential to revolutionize medicine
3-D printings

2015
UC Berkeley


Yesterday, a UC Berkeley research team led by Ronald Rael, associate professor of architecture, unveiled the first and largest powder-based 3-D printed cement s⋯⋯




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Using a 3-D printer, these college kids are making robotic arms for children without real ones. http://cnn.it/1wPjjjh



College kids make robotic arms for children without real ones


CNN.COM|由 DAPHNE SASHIN, CNN 上傳

In the spring of 2014, first-year M.D.- Ph.D. student Du Cheng brought a bone fragment from an anatomical model to Dr. Estomih Mtui. Cheng told Dr. Mtui, a professor of anatomy of radiology, that he'd found the fragment, part of a facsimile of the fourJth lumbar vertebrae that had gone missing from the lab.
That was a fib: Cheng had actually created the piece using a 3D printer, a demo model he'd seen in a store. But he wanted to test the machine's prowess, so he passed it off to Dr. Mtui as the real thing. The professor slipped the bone model in place — and it fit. Only then did Cheng reveal that the crucial bit had been printed for mere pennies. As Cheng recalls it: "I said, 'Oh my God — you didn't realize that producing this only cost 25 cents!'"
In summer 2014 — fueled in part by that success — Cheng convinced Weill Cornell Medicine to purchase a 3D printer for general use, and he has since formed a user's group that now includes more than 100 people. The printer is in the library — Cheng says he enjoys watching tour groups of prospective students stop and admire it — and is available to members of the Weill Cornell Medicine community who complete a training class with the student group DimensionWorks for Biomedical Design, of which Cheng is president.





Print It!


In 3D printing, a user designs an object using a computer program; the printer then creates it by extruding one thin layer of plastic on top of another, building it up into the desired shape. The technology is already having a positive impact on research, says Jonathan Witztum, a doctoral candidate in physiology, biophysics and systems biology. For example, Witztum recently needed a special kind of imaging chamber to study brain tissue for his thesis. "Having the printer on campus shortened the time it took to design and perfect the chambers we use," Witztum says. "Making it available to everyone has a great impact on people's work." The printer has fostered a number of other projects, Cheng says. It has been used to create a specialized platform for a microscope that would otherwise cost thousands of dollars; to make models of bone marrow for pediatric research; to create a fixation device for researchers imaging the brains of mice; and more.
As work at Weill Cornell Medicine and elsewhere has shown, 3D printing technology has the potential to revolutionize medicine, notes Dr. Francis Barany, a professor of microbiology and immunology. In a collaboration between Weill Cornell Medicine and the Ithaca campus, for example, researchers are creating 3D printed ears made from living tissue that could be implanted in patients who lack them due to a congenital defect. "Every human is different, so the ability to print something that can be put into the body is very exciting," Dr. Barany says. "3D printing is a baby right now. Who knows how it's going to grow up?"
— Jeff Stein






Cornell University 更新了封面相片。

New 3D printer at Weill Cornell Medicine has the potential to revolutionize medicine. Learn more:http://weill.cornell.edu/news/news/2015/11/print-it.html