2011 in science

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26 November 2011: NASA launches its Curiosity rover (pictured), the largest Mars rover yet built.

The year 2011 involved many significant scientific events, including the first artificial organ transplant, the launch of China's first space station and the growth of the world population to seven billion. The year saw a total of 78 successful orbital spaceflights, as well as numerous advances in fields such as electronics, medicine, genetics, climatology and robotics.

2011 was declared the International Year of Forests and Chemistry by the United Nations.[1][2]

Events, discoveries and inventions

January

18 January 2011: scientists prove that sharks are functionally colorblind.
20 January 2011: researchers demonstrate a medical technique that renders human T-cells (pictured, right) resistant to HIV.

February

3 February 2011: the Kepler space telescope discovers a solar system of six planets orbiting the star Kepler-11 (artist's impression pictured).

March

18 March 2011: the MESSENGER probe (artist's rendering shown) becomes the first spacecraft to orbit the planet Mercury.
27 March 2011: American scientists successfully demonstrate a fire-suppression system which uses electric fields to extinguish open flames.

April

6 April 2011: scientists in Japan grow working retinas from mouse stem cells.
21 April 2011: a modified anti-malaria gene is successfully introduced to a population of mosquitoes.

May

4 May 2011: NASA's orbiting Gravity Probe B (pictured pre-launch) experimentally confirms two aspects of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity.
12 May 2011: astronomers state that the exoplanet Gliese 581d (artist's impression pictured) could potentially support Earth-like life.
26 May 2011: American scientists successfully transmute human skin cells directly into neurons (pictured).

June

1 June 2011: two new chemical elements, 114 and 116, are officially added to the periodic table.
12 June 2011: the Nabro Volcano erupts in Eritrea (ash plume pictured), despite having been considered extinct.
22 June 2011: Stanford University engineers develop nanowire electronics that can be attached to nearly any surface (gold nanowires pictured).

July

7 July 2011: Swedish surgeons successfully carry out the world's first artificial organ transplant, giving a cancer patient a new, lab-grown trachea.
16 July 2011: NASA's Dawn spacecraft successfully enters orbit around the asteroid 4 Vesta (pictured).
21 July 2011: the final mission of the Space Shuttle program, STS-135, ends with the landing of Space Shuttle Atlantis (pictured) at Kennedy Space Center.

August

10 August 2011: a new gene therapy successfully kills off leukemia lymphocytes (pictured) in three advanced patients.
19 August 2011: the American Office of Naval Research successfully tests a new class of conventional explosive, reportedly five times more powerful than existing explosives.

September

2 September 2011: scientists create a working electric motor made from a single molecule (molecular-scale computer pictured).
14 September 2011: NASA publishes the design of its future heavy-lift rocket, the Space Launch System (concept art shown).

October

12 October 2011: scientists reconstruct the genome of the Black Death which devastated Europe in the 14th century.
26 October 2011: the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, the first major airliner to significantly incorporate composite materials, completes its first commercial flight.
31 October 2011: the world population reaches seven billion, according to a United Nations estimate.

November

4 November 2011: the MARS-500 isolation experiment (facility diagram shown) ends in Moscow, having simulated a 520-day manned mission to Mars.
8 November 2011: Honda releases an enhanced version of its Asimo humanoid robot (earlier version pictured).
26 November 2011: NASA successfully launches its Mars Science Laboratory mission, which landed the Curiosity Mars rover (artist's impression pictured) on Mars in 2012.[6]

December

1 December 2011: Oxford University scientists successfully induce quantum entanglement in two diamonds, the first time entanglement has been achieved in objects visible to the naked eye.
14 December 2011: scientists develop an imaging system which can capture images at one trillion frames per second, allowing it to image the motion of individual light waves.
21 December 2011: researchers report that non-native snakes have devastated populations of small mammals in the Florida Everglades.

Prizes

Abel Prize

Main article: Abel Prize

Nobel Prize

Deaths

11 February 2011: Christian J. Lambertsen, the inventor of the SCUBA device, dies aged 93.

January

February

March

1 March 2011: John M. Lounge, a former NASA astronaut, dies aged 64.

April

5 April 2011: Baruch Samuel Blumberg, a Nobel Prize-winning American physician, dies aged 85.

May

30 May 2011: Rosalyn Sussman Yalow, a Nobel Prize-winning American physicist, dies aged 89.

June

July

23 July 2011: Robert Ettinger, the "father of cryonics", dies aged 92.

August

September

14 September 2011: Rudolf Mössbauer, a Nobel Prize-winning German physicist, dies aged 82.

October

5 October 2011: Steve Jobs, an American technology entrepreneur and co-founder of Apple Inc., dies aged 56.

November

December

See also

References

  1. International Year of Forests 2011 - Celebrating Forests for People. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  2. International Year of Chemistry 2011 - About IYC. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  3. The article was published in the March 3 issue of the journal.
  4. The paper was presented at the CLEO conference on 2 May, and published on 9 May.
  5. "Reconstructed changes in Arctic sea ice over the past 1,450 years". Nature. 23 November 2011. Retrieved 23 January 2014.
  6. 1 2 "Nasa's Curiosity rover successfully lands on Mars". BBC. 6 August 2012.
  7. Budin, Itay; Devaraj, Neal K. (December 29, 2011). "Membrane Assembly Driven by a Biomimetic Coupling Reaction". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 134 (2): 751–753. doi:10.1021/ja2076873. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  8. Staff (January 25, 2012). "Chemists Synthesize Artificial Cell Membrane". ScienceDaily. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  9. Staff (January 26, 2012). "Chemists create artificial cell membrane". kurzweilai.net. Archived from the original on 2012-02-26. Retrieved February 18, 2012.
  10. Dr. James J. Rahal, 77, Virus Expert, Dies
  11. Rudiger ‘Roger’ Haugwitz, chemist who used science to create art, dies at 79. Washingtonpost.com. Retrieved on 2011-10-10.
  12. Harold Kosasky, 83, pioneer in treatment of infertility. Boston Globe, 26 September 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  13. Dr. Max Harry Weil dies at 84: pioneer in critical care. Articles.latimes.com (2011-08-06). Retrieved on 2011-10-10.
  14. Dr. Charles C. Edwards, Influential F.D.A. Commissioner, Dies at 87
  15. Fritz Bach, Who Aided Transplant Survival, Dies at 77
  16. William Kannel, 87; force behind pioneering Framingham Heart Study. Boston.com (2011-09-18). Retrieved on 2011-10-10.
  17. W. B. Kannel, Who Led Historic Heart Study, Dies at 87. Nytimes.com (2011-08-23). Retrieved on 2011-10-10.
  18. Dr. William Wolff, Colonoscopy Co-Developer, Dies at 94
  19. Bruce Dan, Who Helped Link Toxic Shock and Tampons, Is Dead at 64. New York Times, 10 September 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  20. Dr. Richard Koch dies at 89; medical pioneer. Los Angeles Times, 8 October 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  21. Dr. J. Willis Hurst, Cardiologist to Lyndon B. Johnson, Dies at 90
  22. Morris Chafetz, 87, Dies; Altered View of Alcoholism
  23. Dr. John F. Burke, Dies at 89; Created Synthetic Skin
  24. "T. Franklin Williams, Early Geriatric Specialist, Dies at 90". New York Times, 3 December 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-08.

External links

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