A picture taken on April 23, 2009 shows a woman walking past a part of the science exhibition “Expedition Future” in a train carriage at Berlins main train station. The 'Science Express' has raised interest as far as India and China.—AFP/File Photo

BERLIN How will we feed nine billion people in the future? Can we ever have a disease-free world? Can robots play football?

These and many others are the questions posed and answered on the 'Science Express'—an innovative mobile exhibition showcasing cutting-edge German technology that has raised interest as far a field as India and China.

The exhibition, which is set to visit 60 German cities by November 2009, is staged on a specially-modified 12-carriage train with each car dealing with a different aspect of science, from cosmology to particle physics and evolution.

When the train rolled into platform two at Berlins futuristic Hauptbahnhof (central station), people were queuing up to visit the free displays.

Peter Steiner of the Max Planck Society, which runs the train along with some of Germanys leading companies such as Siemens and Volkswagen, was delighted with the public response to the project, which was officially opened by Chancellor Angela Merkel on April 24.

'Its only our first day and we have already had over 2,000 visitors with 400 or 500 children,' he said.

The institute aims to have 250,000 visitors across Germany, he said, adding 'but at this rate, we will easily beat that.' It is 'not yet decided' whether the train will go outside Germany, Steiner said, confirming that 'there is demand' from China, France, India and Poland.

'We want it to go farther,' he said, adding 'The research ministry also wants to take the train to other countries.' He said that a similar train—a joint Ind-German multimedia exhibition—that is still rattling around India has attracted 2.25 million 'passengers' in eight months.

One possibility might be to take the train to Shanghai for the World Expo next year, Steiner said. In Berlin, the specially-painted train was attracting a wide variety of amateur scientists from commuters in suits to backpackers and schoolchildren and others just killing time before the 1458 to Munich.

Inside the train, there was little trace of the crisis within German industry with every carriage showcasing the latest leading-edge technology aimed at solving the problems faced in the 21st century.

Two exhibits were especially popular with children a 3D face-scanner that could assess whether they were happy or sad from their facial expression and a driving simulator that judged them not on how fast they could go but on how little emissions the car produced.

The train also featured a 'science lab' where visitors could conduct their own 'research'.

Other popular exhibits included a 'population ticker', showing the current population of the world (over 6.7 billion and rising by about one per second) and a 'climbing robot' capable of shinning up cables and pipes using a camera for its eye.

'In general, I think its a very good idea, great for the kids,'34-year-old Paul Hoffmann told AFP, who visited the exhibition with his two sons Oliver, 12, and six-year-old Tosca.

'The best thing was the robot that could play football,' enthused Oliver, while his younger brother preferred the multi-coloured panels in the 'house of light', designed to showcase organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs).

Ten-year-old Juergen was similarly keen on the exhibition. 'It was much better than doing science in school,' he said.

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