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Among Top Six in World. About an Achievement of Armenian Scientists

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  • Among Top Six in World. About an Achievement of Armenian Scientists

    The Noyan Tapan Highlights weekly, Yerevan,
    no. 46, 8 December 2008.

    Among Top Six in the World. About an Achievement of Armenian Scientists

    By Haroutiun Khachatrian


    It was an ordinary laboratory in the basement of the Physics
    Department of Yerevan State University. The university has dozens of
    such laboratories whose shelves are filled with unnoticeable devices
    that seem to have remained unchanged since the Soviet time. When I was
    in the lab, there were only three people there, Samvel Gevorgian, the
    head of the lab, a modest man with an almost shy smile, and two young
    scientific workers of his small group ... Two items on the table, the
    prizes the group had recently won, were the only unusual thing. The
    silver cup with an inscription "2008 Global Security Challenge
    Finalist" immediately caught the eye.

    Global Security Challenge was a competition in science and technology
    organized by famous London Business School and NUC Enterprise Company
    (U.S.) in July-November of this year. Its goal was described as
    follows:

    "Global Security Challenge (GSC) runs the leading international
    business plan competition to find and select the most promising
    security technology start-ups in the world. The mission of the GSC is
    to stimulate technological innovations that make airports, cities and
    enterprises safer without encroaching on civil liberties."

    The winner was to receive half a million dollars. About two thousand
    companies, research groups and individuals took part in the
    competition. In order to reach the final stage, each participant was
    to win a regional competition at first. Armenia was included in the
    so-called Asian Group, in which some 800 works participated - from
    countries ranging from Japan and Australia to those of the former
    USSR. On September 26 the work of Samvel Gevorgian's group was
    recognized as one of the five that won in the indicated group and it
    reached the Grand final, to be held in London on November 13 (besides
    the Asian Group, there were also European an American groups). So, on
    that day, six works were recognized as Global Security Challenge
    Finalists, actually, winners of the competition. The above mentioned
    half a million dollars was given to only one work which, in the
    opinion of many, was not the best one. In particular, an unofficial
    vote of the experts present at the competition evaluated the Armenian
    work among the top three, better than the American work that received
    the monetary prize.

    What was done

    The brief and dry words of the description of the scientific work say
    that the Armenian scientists developed an ultra-high sensitivity
    Seismic Detection Subsystem that can also be used in many other fields
    where very small and very slow movements must be detected, for
    example, products for high precision instruments and tools, or so
    called absolute position sensor products. The key to achieving all
    this is an instrument small enough to be held in the palm. It is hard
    to imagine by casting an unaccustomed glance that several coils of a
    black wire wound on a square metal represent the indicated
    revolutionary innovation officially called a "single-layer flat or
    domed pick-up coil with high Q-factors". Samvel Gevorgian showed me
    two graphs - seismograms made in this basement room on two different
    days. On one day the oscillations were much higher than on the other
    day. However, it does not mean that an earthquake occurred that day.
    The Day of Strong Oscillations was a usual working day, whereas the
    Day of Weak Oscillations was a holiday. The seismograph just recorded
    the concussions caused by passing cars and even human footsteps. This
    device with a fantastic sensitivity can record position changes as
    small as one nanometre, that is, million times smaller than a
    millimetre. Even more important is that, different from devices no in
    use, the Gevorgian's coil can recognize also very slow movement, It is
    difficult to believe, but the device is sensitive to movement of the
    Moon, it reacts to (and registers) the rise of the Moon like the ocean
    water during tide!

    It is obvious that such a high-sensitivity device can be used not only
    in seismology. It was acknowledged at the Global Security Challenge
    Competition that the device can be applied in various spheres, from
    medicine to the fields where an unexpected danger not perceptible to
    the human eye and ear may emerge.

    "We were told in London: "It does not matter that you did not receive
    this half a million dollars. Instead you have won recognition and
    attracted interest. This can bring much more money," Samvel Gevorgian
    said. According to him, negotiations on the sale of the technology are
    now underway with representatives of four countries, and negotiations
    with one of them - a Singaporean firm, have come quite close to
    bringing results.

    Science and economy

    Now I should mention Samvel Gevorgian's words which may seem unusual
    to many. In his words, the fact that the invention of his group will
    bring money soon is first of all satisfying because he will be able to
    allocate resources for new studies and inventions. "We have a great
    wealth - our qualified specialists. Very often they are more skilful
    than their colleagues in other countries but they demand less payment.
    The very restricted funds provided by the state are never sufficient
    for science".

    We can add that, in particular, funds provided by the Armenian state
    are quite insufficient. The question of why this government, which has
    proclaimed creation of a knowledge-based economy as a priority,
    allocates 0.6% of GDP to science while at least 2% is considered
    normal (according to Samvel Gevorgian, 2% would not be enough either)
    is a subject of a separate conversation. Let's see how this group
    managed to achieve such a result with limited resources. Two persons:
    Harutyun Karapetyan and Levon Torose should be mentioned in this
    connection.

    Harutyun Karapetyan heads the National Foundation of Science and
    Advanced Technologies (NFSAT), a non-state organization engaged in the
    introduction of modern methods of science financing in Armenia for ten
    years. These methods envisage an independent peer review of the
    projects; it was not applied in the USSR and is not used effectively
    in Armenia so far. Karapetyan noted with pride that their Foundation
    has provided grants to the group of Samvel Gevorgian several times,
    thanks to which the group managed to complete the development of its
    single-layer flat coil.

    The NFSAT's grant called Commercialization of Products/Results Support
    Program deserves special mention. In this case the grant was provided
    not for implementation of purely scientific work but for
    commercialization of the work done. It was also an unprecedented case
    in the history of Armenian science.

    How this concrete scientific work became a commercial product is a
    long story. Suffice it to say that in the above mentioned Global
    Security Challenge Competition, the bid was submitted not by the
    laboratory of Dr Samvel Gevorgian but by a commercial enterprise,
    Precision Sensors/Instrumentation Development & Production Co. (PSI).
    Samvel Gevorgian, though one of the founders of that enterprise, is an
    advisor at it, and the manager is the third man who plays an important
    role in this work - Levon Torose. U.S-based Levon Torose is known as a
    benefactor in Armenia and Artsakh. He worked at a big U.S. company for
    many years and knows well what is needed in order to pass from science
    to production and commerce.

    At this point our story ends. It can be called a success story in
    Armenia, even though it is quite far from a real success story by
    Western standards. Its participants believe that the cause of
    transforming scientific results of Armenian thought into money, and
    thus ensuring the country's progress and preventing the brain drain is
    quite real and promising.
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