November 2005 in science

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Other events in January 2006
World - Sci-Tech - Sports
Britain and Ireland - Canada
Hong Kong and Macao
Australia & NZ - India - US

[edit] Today's featured article

Technetium

[edit] Deaths in November

16 - Henry Taube

[edit] Events

9: Launch of Venus Express
19: First Hayabusa touchdown
26: Second Hayabusa touchdown
and sample collection
2005 Atlantic hurricane season
2005 Pacific hurricane season

[edit] Related pages

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

[edit] November 30, 2005

[edit] November 29, 2005

[edit] November 26, 2005

[edit] November 24, 2005

[edit] November 23, 2005

[edit] November 21, 2005

[edit] November 20, 2005

[edit] November 19, 2005

  • Hayabusa fails to take surface samples of 25143 Itokawa after dropping a target marker and guiding itself to a distance of 17 m to its target. At that point the spacecraft enters its "safe mode" for unknown reasons, and communications are interrupted for three hours. During this time it drifts but is assumed to be currently within 100 km of the asteroid. (AP/YahooNews) (AFP/YahooNews)

[edit] November 18, 2005

  • Removing the Sir2 gene has revealed a potential breakthrough in ageing research; as the cells are tricked into reacting as though there is a food shortage and slowing down. This has resulted in organisms living six times longer than normal. (Guardian)
  • Archaeologists in Norway discover 35 stone age settlements in southern parts of the border between Telemark and Vestfold counties; 20 of the dwellings stem from the Upper Paleolithic period, roughly 8,000 BC. Before this discovery, only six such dwellings were known in the whole of southern Norway. The excavations have been done in this exact area and time as part of the preparation for rerouting and widening European Highway E18. (This follows the standard procedure in Norway of the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments and Historic Buildings withholding the startup of major road construction projects until proper archaeological excavations of the affected area have been performed.) (NRK.no) (in Norwegian only; English-language reports awaited)

[edit] November 17, 2005

  • Computer security experts warn that the software provided by Sony to uninstall its XCP tools creates additional vulnerabilities. (BBC)

[edit] November 16, 2005

[edit] November 14, 2005

[edit] November 12, 2005

  • The release of the Minerva robot by Hayabusa fails to deliver it onto the surface of 25143 Itokawa. Most likely the release command was incorrectly timed, and the robot left the gravity field of the asteroid. (MSNBC)

[edit] November 11, 2005

[edit] November 10, 2005

  • A Boeing 777-200LR airliner breaks the world distance record for commercial jetliners by flying nonstop from Hong Kong to London via the Pacific, North America and the Atlantic—a distance of 11,664 nautical miles (21,601 km). The flight took 22 hours and 42 minutes. (Boeing)

[edit] November 9, 2005

[edit] November 8, 2005

[edit] November 4, 2005

  • xG Technology demonstrates a wireless technology, called xMax, which is reportedly 1,000 times more efficient than WiMax. According to the company, one base station can cover the same area as 90 WiMax base stations. (TechWorld)
  • The Hayabusa space probe's "dress rehearsal" approach to the surface of asteroid 25143 Itokawa is cancelled shortly before the beginning of the descent due to an anomalous signal from the spacecraft. (BBC)

[edit] November 3, 2005

[edit] November 2, 2005

[edit] Past science and technology events by month

2005 in science: June July August September October
(For earlier science and technology events, see May 2005 and preceding months)

[edit] News collections and sources

See: Wikipedia:Current science and technology events sources.

[edit] See also

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