March 2005 in science

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March 2005 : - January - February - March - April - May - June - July - August - September - October - November - December -

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Other March 2005 events
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Monthly events, 2005

[edit] Deaths in March

6Hans Bethe

[edit] Related pages

2005 in science
2004 in science
2003 in science
2002 in science
2001 in science

Other Years in Sci Tech

[edit] March 30, 2005

[edit] March 29, 2005

[edit] March 28, 2005

[edit] March 27, 2005

  • Scientists have developed a new variety of Golden Rice, Golden Rice 2, that produces 23 times more beta-carotene than the original variety. It is hoped that the new variety will provide sufficient provitamin A to supplement the diet of people at risk of vitamin A deficiency. (BBC)

[edit] March 25, 2005

  • A new High-resolution Ultrasonic Transmission Tomography (HUTT) system made at the University of Southern California could offer resolutions of 0.4mm for soft tissue scan. This is an order of magnitude better than the best X-Ray or MRI alternatives and it safe. (USC)
  • Blue Gene/L the world's fastest supercomputer completed a trillion calculations a second, beating its own record. (BBC)

[edit] March 24, 2005

[edit] March 23, 2005

  • For the first time light from planets outside the solar system has been directly observed by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Up until now all extrasolar planets have been found using the "wobble" and "transit" techniques. (PhysOrg)
  • Researches show that the plant Arabidopsis can change the DNA sequences that were inherited from their parents, reverting to that of their grandparents. The findings challenge the understanding of inheritance first described by Mendel. (Nature)

[edit] March 22, 2005

[edit] March 17, 2005

[edit] March 16, 2005

  • Hitachi unveils its robot Emiew which will compete with the engineering prowess of Honda's ASIMO and Sony's QRIO robots. Emiew's use of wheels instead of feet makes it the fastest robot yet; and its focus is Excellent Mobility and Interactive Existence as Workmate. (BBC)
  • The sequencing of the human X chromosome is published in Nature and there are matching segments in chromosomes of animals. This supports the theory that when genes are transferred from "non-sex" chromosomes, they stay there. (New Scientist)
  • Scientists at the Scripps Research Institute La Jolla, California have developed an artificial fifth base for DNA. The fifth base is called 3-fluorobenzene (3FB), 3FB pairs with itself, and it is hoped that this new tool can be used to learn about DNA evolution. (Nature)

[edit] March 15, 2005

[edit] March 14, 2005

[edit] March 12, 2005

  • Mission members monitoring the Spirit rover on Mars report that a lucky encounter with a dust devil has cleaned the solar panels of that robot. Power levels have dramatically increased and daily science work is anticipated to be expanded. (space.com)

[edit] March 11, 2005

[edit] March 10, 2005

[edit] March 8, 2005

[edit] March 7, 2005

[edit] March 6, 2005

[edit] March 5, 2005

[edit] March 4, 2005

[edit] March 3, 2005

[edit] March 1, 2005


[edit] Events in science and technology by month

2008 in science: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2007 in science: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2006 in science: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2005 in science: January February March April May June July August September October November December
2004 in science: November December
(For earlier science and technology events, see October 2004 and preceding months)

[edit] News collections and sources

See: Wikipedia:Current science and technology sources.