January (artist's rendering pictured) hosts at least one
exoplanet. • 2 January • A study by
Caltech astronomers reports that the
Milky Way Galaxy contains at least one planet per star, resulting in approximately 100–400 billion
exoplanets. The study, based on planets orbiting the star
Kepler-32, suggests that
planetary systems may be the norm around stars in the Milky Way Galaxy. • Astronomers report the discovery of giant "geysers" of charged particles emanating from the core of the Milky Way Galaxy. These outflows, which extend as far as 50,000
light-years from the
galactic plane, are thought to be fuelled by intense star formation. •
LG Electronics releases the first commercial
OLED television. OLED screens are thinner, more efficient and capable of displaying images with greater definition than conventional
LCD and
plasma screens. • 3 January • Physicists create a
potassium-based quantum gas which can be manipulated by
lasers and
magnetic fields to reach
negative temperatures. At such temperatures, matter begins to exhibit previously unknown qualities. • Scientists analyse a
meteorite,
NWA 7034, that was found in the
Sahara Desert and purchased in
Morocco in 2011, and report that it is a new type of
Mars rock with an unusually high water content. • American researchers state that a
gene associated with active personality traits is also linked to increased
longevity. • 4 January •
Britain's first
hand transplantation operation is successfully conducted. •
Toyota demonstrates an
autonomous car capable of sensing and reacting to its surroundings, monitoring its driver and communicating with other vehicles. • 6 January • British researchers successfully cure
blindness in
mice using an injection of photosensitive cells. Following additional testing, the treatment could be used to heal humans with
retinitis pigmentosa. •
China is reported to be experiencing a rapid growth in the use of
industrial robots, with robot installations increasing at over 10 percent a year. treatment that uses
sickle cells (pictured) to kill off
tumours by starving them of their blood supply. • 7 January •
Australia experiences its hottest day on record, with nationwide average temperatures exceeding 40
°C amid one of the most intense
bushfire seasons in the country's history. • Remarkably well-preserved
zinc pills are discovered aboard a 2,000-year-old
Roman shipwreck, giving a rare insight into
Roman medicine. • Astronomers at the
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) report that "at least 17 billion"
Earth-sized exoplanets are estimated to reside in the Milky Way Galaxy. • 8 January • The 2013
Consumer Electronics Show opens in
Las Vegas,
Nevada. Among the new technologies showcased are
flexible tablet computers, autonomous cars, medical
telepresence robots,
ultra-definition TVs and high-efficiency microchips. • The
German defence company
Rheinmetall successfully demonstrates a high-powered military
laser that can destroy
drones in mid-flight and cut through steel from over away, even in adverse weather conditions. The company plans to mount the laser on a variety of vehicles for battlefield use. • American astronomers announce the discovery of seven new
exocomets – more than double the previously known number of such objects. The exocomets were discovered using the
McDonald Observatory in
Texas, which imaged the chemical signatures of the comets' tails. • Astronomers affiliated with the
Kepler space observatory announce the discovery of
KOI-172.02, an
Earth-like exoplanet candidate which orbits a star similar to the
Sun in the
habitable zone, and is possibly a "prime candidate to host
alien life". • 9 January • A
gamma secretase inhibitor previously experimented for treating
Alzheimer's disease is found to have regenerative effects on
inner ear hair cells, potentially allowing for the effective treatment of
deafness. • The most distant known
supernova is discovered by the
Hubble Space Telescope, at a distance of around 10 billion light-years. • Medical researchers state that
sickle cells can be induced to attack treatment-resistant
tumours by starving them of blood. • British and Canadian researchers create a
tablet computer which is as thin as paper and also flexible. • 10 January • Half of all food
is wasted worldwide, according to a new report by the British
Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IME). • The English
general lighthouse authority activate a new backup navigation system that allows ships to navigate even if their
GPS signals fail. •
The first vessel of a new class of
nuclear submarine goes into service with the
Russian Navy, featuring a built-in escape pod to allow crew members to survive a critical hull breach. • An American company unveils a smart
hunting rifle which uses a computerised scope, onboard aiming software and
laser rangefinders to ensure great accuracy even in the hands of novice shooters. The rifle is also
Wi-Fi-enabled, and its software can
record its aiming and firing history, potentially allowing law enforcement agencies to track its use. (pictured) is present in humans. • 11 January •
Manchester University chemists develop a functional
molecular machine, only a few
nanometers in size, that can assemble complex molecular structures in a fashion similar to DNA
ribosomes. The invention could be used to precisely fashion new medicines or
polymers. • Astronomers discover a distant cluster of supermassive
quasars that is both the largest and brightest structure in the known universe, spanning approximately four billion light-years. • New high-precision observations of the
asteroid 99942 Apophis reveal that it is almost certain that the asteroid will not strike the Earth in 2036, despite earlier scientific concern over its trajectory. • Scientists develop a
Breathalyzer-like breath test that could be used to quickly and accurately diagnose
lung infections. • 12 January • Official sources state that
Beijing's air is now hazardous to human health, after years of mounting
air pollution. The city's air contains as much as 20 times the
World Health Organization's recommended amount of toxic particles. • Researchers in
University of Montana report recreational fishing may drive evolutionary changes in
largemouth bass, making them harder to catch and less attentive parents. David O. Conover notes it affects both physical traits and fish behavior over time. • 13 January –
Massachusetts doctors invent a pill-sized medical scanner that can be safely swallowed by patients, allowing the
esophagus to be more easily scanned for diseases. • 15 January – The first museum of
3D-printed artifacts opens in China. • 17 January –
NASA announces that the
Kepler space observatory has developed a
reaction wheel issue and will discontinue operation for 10 days in the interest of solving the problem. Three functional reaction wheels are needed to accurately aim the telescope; one of Kepler original four reaction wheels failed in July 2012. If this second wheel issue is not resolved, NASA may be forced to end the long-running
Kepler mission altogether. • 18 January –
Japanese researchers create a "privacy visor" which uses near-
infrared light to render its wearer unrecognizable to
facial recognition software. • 20 January – Scientists prove that
quadruple-helix DNA is present in human cells. • 21 January – Architects begin preparations for constructing the world's first
3D-printed building. The building will be constructed of a high-strength artificial
marble laid down by an industrial-scale 3D printer, and is planned for completion in 2014. • 22 January •
French glaciologists release a report stating that the
glaciers of the
Andes are melting at an unprecedented rate. •
NEC and
Corning Inc. develop a multi-core
fiber optic cable that can transfer a record-breaking
petabit of data per second. • The
private spaceflight venture
Deep Space Industries announces plans to begin scanning and
mining asteroids for precious metals. The company intends to launch its first prospecting spacecraft in 2015. • A
resolution is introduced to the
United States Congress to designate 12 February 2013 (
Charles Darwin's 204th birthday) as "
Darwin Day" in order to recognize "the importance of sciences in the betterment of humanity". s of the
Andes are melting at an unprecedented rate. • 23 January • Scientists encode large amounts of digital information, including the complete
sonnets of
William Shakespeare, on a single strand of
synthetic DNA. DNA has immense potential as a storage medium, and may become commercially available for this purpose in the near future. • Scientists resume
controversial research into the H5N1 influenza subtype, which was previously halted due to fears of
biological terrorism. • A British amputee becomes the first person in the UK to receive the
Michelangelo Hand, an advanced new
bionic hand, which uses electrodes to precisely mimic muscle movements and which can be used even for delicate engineering tasks. •
Kenya begins the construction of the
Konza Technology City, a
planned city that is hoped to become a hub of African science and technology upon its completion in 2030. • 24 January – Britain's
Chief Medical Officer warns that
antibiotic resistance could have "apocalyptic" consequences, with numerous common
bacterial infections becoming increasingly resistant to treatment. • 25 January • An international team of scientists develops a functional light-based "
tractor beam", which allows individual cells to be selected and moved at will. The invention could have broad applications in medicine and
microbiology. • Scientists design an
evolution-inspired organic
solar cell with a novel geometric pattern that increases its energy-harvesting efficiency. • New measurements performed by European scientists reveal that the radius of the
proton is 4 percent smaller than previously estimated. • 27 January –
Asteroid 274301, a
main belt asteroid, is officially renamed "Wikipedia" by the
Committee for Small Body Nomenclature. • 28 January •
Bolivian scientists restore brain function to
stroke-affected
rats by injecting them with
stem cells. This breakthrough may lead to more effective treatments for strokes in humans. • American medical researchers develop a painless polymer skin patch that can be used to inject
DNA vaccines without a conventional needle, and also increases the initial effectiveness of the vaccine delivered. • An American research team uses the world's most powerful
supercomputer at the time – the
IBM Sequoia – to perform a record-breaking computation, modelling an experimental
jet engine on over one million
processor cores. •
Iran successfully launches a live
rhesus monkey into space and
recovers the animal safely, in what is claimed to be a prelude to the country's future
human spaceflight efforts. • American scientists finish drilling down to the
subglacial Lake Whillans, which is buried around under the
Antarctic ice. conducts its first successful orbital launch with its indigenous
Naro-1 rocket (replica pictured). • 29 January •
NASA reports that the
Kepler space observatory has successfully returned to "science data collection" mode, after suffering a
reaction wheel malfunction earlier in the month. •
ESA scientists report that the
ionosphere of the planet
Venus streams outwards in a manner similar to "the ion tail seen streaming from a
comet under similar conditions." • 30 January –
South Korea conducts its first successful orbital launch, using the
Naro-1 rocket to place a satellite into orbit. • 31 January • British scientists achieve a breakthrough in
synthetic biology, developing microscopic biological "factories" that can be assembled in hours and which could be used to deliver medicines, produce
biofuels and mine underground minerals. • Scientists
sequence the genome of the
domestic pigeon, discovering that all modern pigeon breeds are descended from the wild
rock dove. • The ESA, in collaboration with a group of architectural firms, designs and tests a
3D-printed structure that can be built out of lunar
regolith to serve as a
Moon base. • Japanese scientists genetically modify a transparent
zebrafish specimen to produce a visible glow during periods of intense brain activity, allowing the fish's "thoughts" to be recorded as specific regions of its brain light up in response to external stimuli.
February • 1 February •
Stanford University physicists discover that atom-thin sheets of
graphene are 100 times more chemically reactive than thicker sheets. This reactivity may be crucial to developing new practical applications for graphene, which is already widely known for its immense strength and conductivity. • Medical researchers develop a new method of efficiently detecting cancer using
bioelectric signals. In addition, they were able to manipulate cellular electric charge levels to prevent certain cells from developing cancer. • 2 February •
Iran unveils the
Qaher-313 which it claims is its first
stealth fighter. •
Californian researchers use
genetic modification to rejuvenate ageing blood cells, strengthening the
immune systems of elderly mice. If human trials prove successful, this treatment could allow older people to more effectively resist disease. • 3 February • The
Scottish Government announces plans for a national physics prize named in honour of
Peter Higgs, who first theorized the
Higgs boson in 1964. • The
British Army begins using a miniature
drone helicopter in
Afghanistan. The aerial surveillance robot weighs just 16 grams, and can be remotely piloted into difficult terrain to detect hidden enemy positions. to confirm that a newly unearthed skeleton is that of the medieval king
Richard III (pictured). • 4 February • American researchers develop a new molecular therapy which can cross the
blood–brain barrier to deliver medicines to the brain, potentially helping to treat neurological diseases such as
Parkinson's disease. • A much-vaunted experimental
vaccine for
tuberculosis proves to be largely ineffective against the disease in human trials. • After
DNA testing, scientists confirm that a medieval skeleton unearthed in
Leicester is that of the defeated
Plantagenet king
Richard III, who was killed in battle in 1485. • Australian engineers build a "quantum microscope" which offers unprecedented levels of precision in measuring live biological systems. •
Sea urchins are discovered to be capable of efficiently converting
carbon dioxide into raw material for their shells, potentially offering a new method of
carbon capture for industrial purposes. • 5 February • Scientists at Scotland's
Heriot-Watt University develop a 3D printer that can produce clusters of living
stem cells, potentially allowing
complete organs to be printed on demand in future. • American researchers partially cure
Usher syndrome in mice, a severe form of congenital
deafness, using a precisely targeted
gene therapy. • 6 February •
Halley VI, a new British
Antarctic research station, begins operation. The station, which is mounted on hydraulic ski-legs to allow it to be towed across the ice, features an advanced modular design and is expected to endure the Antarctic climate until 2050. • In a series of separate developments, American and Japanese engineers create 3D printers that can produce edible meals with a range of flavours and textures on demand. These could both replace conventional
ready meals and allow astronauts to enjoy a far more varied diet. • Astronomers report that 6% of all
dwarf stars – the most common stars in the known universe – may host Earthlike planets. Additionally, some such
exoplanets may exist only 13 light-years from Earth. • Scientists discover live
bacteria in the subglacial Antarctic Lake Whillans. • 8 February • Scientists use an extensive genetic and
phenotypic database to determine the common ancestor of all modern
placental mammals, including humans. •
New York researchers successfully cure
leukodystrophy in mice by using skin cells to repair damaged
myelin sheaths. This treatment may also prove effective in curing human
multiple sclerosis. • 10 February • NASA's
Curiosity Mars rover uses its onboard drill to obtain the first deep rock sample ever retrieved from the surface of another planet. • A genetically engineered strain of the
vaccinia virus is found to triple the average survival time of patients with a severe form of
liver cancer. • 12 February –
North Korea conducts its
third nuclear test despite international sanctions and condemnation. • 13 February • The
ESA's
CryoSat detects a significant decline in
Arctic ice cover. • Scientists successfully cure
type 1 diabetes in
dogs using a pioneering
gene therapy. (atmospheric trail pictured) impacts
Chelyabinsk,
Russia, injuring over 1,200 people. • 14 February •
University of Oxford engineers construct an
autonomous car that can be easily switched between manual and self-driving modes. • The
Large Hadron Collider (LHC) begins a planned two-year shutdown, during which it will undergo a major systems upgrade. Upon its reactivation in 2014, the LHC will operate at an energy of approximately 14
teraelectronvolts – double its current maximum energy. • Researchers develop a specialized neural implant which gives
rats the ability to sense
infrared light – a pioneering use of implant technology to grant
living creatures new abilities, instead of simply replacing or augmenting existing ones. • The United States
Food and Drug Administration approves the first functional commercial
bionic eye, the
Argus II, for the treatment of blindness. The device, which became available in Europe in 2011, uses a combination of ocular implants and camera-equipped glasses to restore vision to people blinded by
retinitis pigmentosa. • 15 February • A 10-ton
meteoroid impacts in
Chelyabinsk,
Russia, producing a powerful shockwave and injuring over 1,000 people. • The asteroid
2012 DA14, which masses around 130,000 tons, makes the closest Earth flyby yet recorded for a large asteroid, passing within of the Earth's surface. • 18 February – Studies of a recently discovered
Higgs boson-like particle suggest that
the universe may end in a
false vacuum collapse billions of years from now. • 19 February • The UK government pledges to provide advanced
bionic limbs for all British soldiers who have lost limbs in combat. • A new species of
bent-toed gecko is formally described, having been discovered in
Vietnam. • 20 February • NASA reports the discovery of
Kepler-37b, the smallest
exoplanet yet known, around the size of Earth's
Moon. • Internet entrepreneurs
Sergey Brin and
Mark Zuckerberg announce
a new global prize for excellence in the
life sciences, offering US$3 million to each recipient. • The
President of the United States,
Barack Obama, announces the
Brain Activity Map Project – a decade-long collaborative effort to map the structures and functions of the
human brain, with the aim of yielding new treatments for a range of neural diseases. • 21 February •
Cornell University scientists use a 3D printer to create a living artificial
ear from
collagen and ear cell cultures. In future, such ears could be grown to order for patients with ear trauma or amputation. • The deepest known
hydrothermal vents are discovered in the
Caribbean at a depth of almost . • A study finds that
bumblebees can sense
electric fields around flowers. •
University of Pennsylvania researchers develop a "protein passport" able to bypass the body's immune system. This could aid the delivery of medicinal nanoparticles in future
nanomedicine. • 22 February – Data gathered from
Siberian ice caves reveals that continued global warming may lead to widespread thawing of
permafrost, potentially releasing massive volumes of trapped
carbon dioxide and
methane into the atmosphere. to date,
Kepler-37b (shown second from left). • 23 February – A US inventor builds a "
spider-sense" bodysuit, equipped with
ultrasonic sensors and
haptic feedback systems, which can alert its wearer of approaching threats and allow them to detect and respond to attackers even when blindfolded. • 24 February • Oxford University researchers discover the mechanism by which certain brain cells are able to survive being starved of
oxygen. In future, this research may yield more effective
stroke treatments. • A study finds that
chimpanzees solve puzzles for entertainment just as humans do. • Scientists announce that they have found fragments of
Rodinia, an ancient "lost"
supercontinent, in what is now the
Indian Ocean. • 25 February •
Israel successfully tests its
Arrow 3 missile defence system, designed to destroy enemy
ballistic missiles while they are still high in the Earth's atmosphere. • 26 February • American engineers develop a
wirelessly charged flexible battery that can continue to function even if stretched to three times its usual size. With further development, the invention could be used to power flexible smartphones, tablets and medical electronics. • A study finds that
sleep loss can alter the behavior of
genes, which may explain why it often precedes more serious medical problems such as
diabetes,
obesity, and
heart disease. • 27 February • Astronomers use the
NuSTAR satellite to accurately measure the spin of a
supermassive black hole for the first time, reporting that its surface is spinning at almost the speed of light. • An American company constructs a lightweight, high-efficiency urban car with an entirely 3D-printed plastic body that is as damage-resistant as steel. The vehicle's construction is entirely automated, requiring no human input beyond the uploading of the car's design. • 28 February •
Duke University researchers successfully connect the brains of two rats with electronic interfaces that allow them to directly share information, in the first-ever direct brain-to-brain interface. • A study finds common genetic links between five major
psychiatric disorders:
autism,
ADHD,
bipolar disorder,
depression, and
schizophrenia. • Astronomers make the first direct observation of a
protoplanet forming in a disk of gas and dust around a distant star. • A third
radiation belt is discovered around the Earth.
March develops an advanced version of its
BigDog heavy-lifting robot (2006 version pictured), featuring a powerful mechanical throwing arm. • 1 March –
Boston Dynamics demonstrates an updated version of its
BigDog military robot, a
mule-sized heavy-lifting robot able to navigate rough terrain and equipped with an arm powerful enough to easily lift and throw
breeze blocks. • 3 March – American scientists report that they have cured
HIV in an infant by giving the child a course of
antiretroviral drugs very early in its life. The previously HIV-positive child has reportedly exhibited no HIV symptoms since its treatment, despite having no further medication for a year. • 4 March • Scientists announce that they have directly measured the
polarization of light, overcoming aspects of the
uncertainty principle. •
DARPA begins efforts to develop a fleet of small naval vessels capable of launching and retrieving
combat drones without the need for large and expensive
aircraft carriers. • In a U.S. first, researchers replace a large part of an injured patient's
skull with a precision 3D-printed polymer replacement implant. • 5 March – The
Human Connectome Project releases the most detailed scans of the human brain yet made, allowing
neuroscientists to more accurately study the complexities of the brain's structure and identify the causes of neural disorders. • 6 March • After studying the DNA of a modern
African American, scientists estimate that the
Y-chromosomal Adam – the most recent male common ancestor of human beings – lived much earlier than previously thought, over 338,000 years ago. • Chinese and Israeli scientists develop a
Breathalyzer-style breath test that can quickly and easily diagnose
stomach cancer by analyzing exhaled chemicals, without the need for an intrusive
endoscopy. • 7 March • After an eight-year project involving the use of a pioneering
cloning technique, Japanese researchers create 25 generations of healthy cloned mice with normal lifespans, demonstrating that clones are not intrinsically shorter-lived than naturally born animals. • An international project known as Bedmap2 analyses 50 years of data to measure the volume of
Antarctic ice, finding it to be , which would raise global sea levels by if it melted. • Scientists from
Oregon State University reconstruct the global temperature record since the end of the
last ice age. Their data, taken from 73 sites around the world, shows a clear and rapid warming trend in the 20th and early 21st centuries. • Tests on mice demonstrate conclusive proof that
resveratrol, a compound found in
red wine, improves health and longevity. • 9 March • British
dental researchers grow viable
teeth from a combination of
gingival cells and stem cells, potentially allowing future patients to receive living teeth to replace diseased or damaged ones. •
Roboticists launch an online database and
cloud computing platform which can be accessed by robots worldwide, allowing them to more easily recognise unfamiliar objects and perform intensive computing tasks. • 11 March • Astronomers discover the
binary brown dwarf Luhman 16 (WISE 1049–5319) at a distance of 6.5
light years from Earth – the closest star system to be discovered since 1916. • A study concludes that
heart disease was common among ancient
mummies. • Researchers develop smart self-healing circuits that can rapidly restore themselves to a fully functional state by detecting and neutralising electronic faults. (antennae pictured) becomes operational in
Chile. At the time, it is the world's most powerful
radio telescope. • 12 March •
NASA's
Curiosity rover finds
evidence that conditions on
Mars were once suitable for
microbial life after analyzing the first drilled sample of
Martian rock,
"John Klein" rock at Yellowknife Bay in
Gale Crater. The rover detected
water,
carbon dioxide,
oxygen,
sulfur dioxide,
hydrogen sulfide,
chloromethane and
dichloromethane. Related tests found results consistent with the presence of
smectite clay minerals. • Japan becomes the first country to successfully extract
natural gas from offshore
methane clathrate deposits. • 13 March • The
Atacama Large Millimeter Array, at the time the world's most powerful
radio telescope, becomes fully operational in northern
Chile. •
Lockheed Martin develops a new method for
desalination that is reportedly vastly cheaper and more efficient than conventional methods. The new technique uses carbon membranes with nanoscale pores to efficiently filter salt molecules from seawater to make drinkable water. • 14 March •
CERN scientists confirm, with a very high degree of certainty, that a new particle identified by the
Large Hadron Collider in July 2012 is the long-sought
Higgs boson. • Scientists induce
monkey skin cells to become healthy brain cells which function normally when implanted into the donor monkey's brain. This breakthrough suggests that such
personalized medicine approaches could be effective in human patients. • 15 March – Scientists working on the Lazarus Project announce that they have successfully rejuvenated cells of
Rheobatrachus silus, a species of frog extinct since 1983. • 16 March –
Japanese researchers unveil the "
smelling screen", a digital display screen capable of emitting pinpointed smells. • 17 March • New data suggests that the
Mariana Trench, the deepest point on the Earth's surface, is home to a large amount of
bacterial life forms. Other researchers reported related studies that microbes thrive inside rocks up to below the sea floor under of ocean off the coast of the northwestern United States. •
Shams 1, the world's largest
concentrated solar power plant, becomes operational in
Abu Dhabi,
United Arab Emirates. • 18 March • If global average temperatures rise by just 2 °C, the number of extreme storm surges like
Hurricane Katrina will increase tenfold, according to new research. • US scientists successfully map 80% of the
neurons in a vertebrate brain at cellular-level resolution in just 1.3 seconds. •
NASA reports evidence from the
Curiosity rover on
Mars of
mineral hydration, likely hydrated
calcium sulfate, in several rock samples, including the broken fragments of
"Tintina" rock and
"Sutton Inlier" rock as well as in the
veins and
nodules in other rocks like
"Knorr" rock and
"Wernecke" rock. Analysis using the rover's
DAN instrument provided evidence of subsurface water, amounting to as much as 4% water content, down to a depth of . • 19 March of the
Neanderthal (skull pictured). • The
Neanderthal genome is sequenced by German scientists from a toe bone found in southern
Siberia. • Scientists announce they can now illuminate up to 100
biomarkers, ten times more than the previous standard. This breakthrough may make it much easier to spot proteins in cancer cells – a vital diagnostic technique. • NASA reports that a software computer problem on the
Curiosity Mars rover is now repaired. • Researchers at the
University of Cambridge demonstrate a virtual "talking head" with realistic emotions, which could lead to more naturalistic human-computer interactions. • Swiss scientists develop a medical scanner that can be implanted just under the skin and can monitor a range of blood-related conditions, providing instant results via mobile phone. They say it will be available to patients by 2017. • 20 March –
Gene therapy is used to cure
leukaemia in three adult patients. • 21 March • The European-led research team behind the
Planck cosmology probe releases the mission's all-sky map of the
cosmic microwave background. The map suggests the
universe is slightly older than thought; according to the team, the universe is
13.798 ± 0.037 billion years old, and contains 4.9%
ordinary matter, 26.8%
dark matter and 68.3%
dark energy. Also, the
Hubble constant was measured to be
67.80 ± 0.77 (km/s)/Mpc. • Scientists develop genetically engineered
T-lymphocytes that have been proven successful in treating cases of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. • 22 March – At the 44th annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, scientists announce the discovery of the first known meteorite to originate from
Mercury. The green rock, known as NWA 7325, is thought to be 4.56 billion years old. • 24 March • Supplementation of the protein
SNX27 reverses the
Down syndrome phenotype in mice, according to new research. • Scientists discover mutations in 26 genes that are believed to be responsible for
oesophageal cancer, a breakthrough that could lead to new drug treatments for the disease. • 27 March – A potential new weight loss method is discovered, after a 20% weight reduction was achieved in mice simply by having their
gut microbes altered. • 28 March • New research suggests that the cloth in the
Turin Shroud, rather than being
medieval in origin, likely dates from between 300 BC and 400 AD. •
Stanford researchers announce the construction of a working
transistor-like device, dubbed a
transcriptor, out of
DNA and
RNA molecules. • 29 March – Scientists create a robotic
ant colony that behaves like a real one. The tiny machines can be programmed to avoid obstacles and find the quickest route through a network or maze.
April reports that the
Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (pictured, center-left) has detected possible signs of the elusive phenomenon known as
dark matter. • 3 April • A breakthrough is achieved in the production of
hydrogen fuel, allowing large quantities to be extracted from any plant. • A new study suggests that common
cholesterol-reducing drugs may also prevent
macular degeneration. •
NASA scientists report that hints of
dark matter may have been detected by the
Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the
International Space Station. According to the scientists, "
the first results from the space-borne Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer confirm an unexplained excess of high-energy
positrons in Earth-bound
cosmic rays." • NASA states that complex
organic chemicals could arise on
Titan, a moon of
Saturn, based on studies simulating the
atmosphere of Titan. • 4 April • The discovery of the most distant
supernova yet found is announced. • Scientists construct a
3D printer which can create material very similar to
human tissue. • A new species of giant
tarantula,
Poecilotheria rajaei, is formally described, having been discovered in
Sri Lanka in 2009. • American scientists announce that they have identified a number of
genetic markers that are associated with an increased risk of
Alzheimer's disease. • A new camera system is developed that can generate high-resolution 3D images from up to a kilometre away. • 7 April – A US
startup company develops plant-derived proteins that can be used as a sustainable, environmentally friendly substitute for
eggs in almost all food products. • 9 April • At the 2013 Sea-Air-Space Exposition, American defense companies display prototypes of numerous advanced weapons technologies, including viable
railguns,
VTOL airships and
grenade-sized reconnaissance robots. • British researchers discover that a mutation of the gene
BRCA2 increases both the risk and severity of
prostate cancer in men, as well as being linked to hereditary
breast cancer in women. • Chinese scientists develop a
carbon-based
aerogel which they claim is the lightest material yet produced, with a density only slightly greater than that of air. • Scientists state that
climate change may cause a significant increase in air
turbulence over the
North Atlantic by 2050, potentially endangering passenger aircraft. • 10 April • Stanford University researchers develop "CLARITY", a method of making brain tissue transparent using
acrylamide, allowing brain structures to be studied in unprecedented detail without requiring extensive
biopsies. • Scientists develop the first objective method of measuring
pain by directly studying the brains of patients. • Scientists find that, by inhibiting the
SEC24A gene,
cholesterol levels in mice can be reduced by 45%, offering hope for an alternative or complementary therapy to
statins. • 11 April • International researchers discover key similarities in the brains of
arthropods and
vertebrates, potentially aiding scientific understanding of the causes of human neural diseases. •
Philips demonstrates a new type of
LED lighting that is reportedly twice as energy-efficient as any previous electric lightbulb. • A study finds that carefully timed sounds played during
sleep can enhance
memory. • NASA reports the
possible finding of the "
debris field" of the 1971 Soviet
Mars 3 lander on the planet
Mars. Images taken by the
HiRISE camera on the
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter seem to show the possible remains of the parachute, retrorockets, heat shield and lander.
Australopithecus sediba (cranium pictured). • 12 April • Animal trials are set to begin on a
gene therapy for
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis – a degenerative condition that
Stephen Hawking has. • Scientists reconstruct the skeleton of the ancient
hominid Australopithecus sediba, discovering that it possessed a unique mixture of human- and ape-like traits. • The first building to be entirely powered by
algae is constructed in
Hamburg. • 15 April • A functional lab-grown
kidney is successfully transplanted into a live rat in
Massachusetts General Hospital. This breakthrough is a major step forward for the nascent field of
regenerative medicine. • The
Cryogenic Dark Matter Search experiment reports the possible discovery of traces of
dark matter, although further experimental confirmation is required. • 16 April – American medical researchers develop a new type of
bandage which uses microscopic needles to adhere to injured flesh. The bandage requires no adhesive chemicals, is significantly stronger than existing medical adhesives, and could offer a safer and more efficient means of securing
skin grafts. • 17 April • Scientists develop a new form of
lithium-ion battery which is thousands of times more powerful than current battery technologies, while also charging much faster. The battery utilises a compact 3D design, intertwining its
electrodes to maximize its surface area while reducing its volume. •
MIT researchers determine the structure of
bones down to the molecular level, using
supercomputer simulations twinned with studies of real bone fibers. Their data grants new insights into the compounds that grant living bone its strength, and may permit the manufacture of versatile new
biomimetic materials. • The
genome of the
coelacanth, an endangered deep-sea "
living fossil", is
sequenced. • 18 April –
NASA announces the discovery of three new Earthlike
exoplanets –
Kepler-62e,
Kepler-62f, and
Kepler-69c – in the
habitable zones of their respective host stars,
Kepler-62 and
Kepler-69. The new exoplanets, which are considered prime candidates for possessing liquid water and thus potentially life, were identified using the
Kepler spacecraft. • 21 April • The
Antares rocket, a
commercial launch vehicle developed by
Orbital Sciences Corporation, successfully conducts its maiden flight. • A study concludes that
stress leads to faster growth in
squirrels. (pictured) is successfully launched on its maiden flight by
Orbital Sciences Corporation. • 22 April • Biologists use
antibodies to transform
bone marrow stem cells directly into healthy brain cells. This breakthrough may allow neurological injuries and illnesses to be more effectively treated, and reduces the risk of
immune rejection. •
University of Exeter scientists report the creation of a genetically modified strain of
E. coli bacteria which can convert
sugar into
diesel fuel. • A British engineer unveils a giant "
mantis" robot, large enough to carry a human pilot, which is supported by multiple
hydraulic legs. The robot has reportedly attracted the interest of mining and marine research companies. • 24 April •
IBM develops a robot which combines
telepresence and
augmented reality technologies to assist engineers working on complex projects in remote areas. •
CERN releases new particle-collision data from the
Large Hadron Collider which may help explain why matter became dominant over
antimatter in the early universe. • 25 April – A
partial lunar eclipse occurs. • 26 April • Following laboratory tests of molten
iron, European scientists determine that the
Earth's core has a temperature of 6,000 degrees
Celsius, 1,000 degrees hotter than previously thought. This discovery may help explain why the planet has such a strong
geomagnetic field. • US and Chinese scientists develop a
sensor array which is as sensitive to touch and pressure as the human fingertip. The invention may pave the way for new
robotic sensors, electronic interfaces and types of
artificial skin. • 27 April – Design approval is given for a crucial reactor component of the
ITER nuclear fusion project, which is currently under construction in
Cadarache,
France, and is expected to begin generating fusion power in 2022. • 29 April • After years of unpowered glide tests,
Scaled Composites'
SpaceShipTwo hybrid
spaceplane successfully conducts its first rocket-powered flight. • The ESA's
Herschel Space Observatory runs out of
liquid helium coolant, marking the end of its highly productive four-year mission to observe the
far infrared universe. • NASA's
Cassini spacecraft photographs an enormous
hurricane on
Saturn, more than 20 times the size of the average terrestrial hurricane. • NASA-funded scientists in Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute claim that, during experiments on the
International Space Station,
microbes seem to adapt to the
space environment in ways "not observed on Earth" and in ways that "can lead to increases in growth and
virulence".
May • 1 May • IBM scientists release
A Boy and His Atom, the smallest
stop-motion animation ever created, made by manipulating individual
carbon monoxide molecules with a
scanning tunnelling microscope. • Researchers discover that
boron nitride – a nanomaterial also known as "white
graphene" – is highly effective at removing harmful chemicals from polluted water, and could be used to clean up future
oil spills. • American engineers create a multi-lens
digital camera that mimics an insect's
compound eye, providing immense
depth of field without distorting the image. • 2 May –
Harvard scientists unveil
RoboBee, a miniature robot with the smallest ever man-made wings capable of flight. • 3 May • Scientists announce the discovery of a previously unknown meat-eating
theropod dinosaur,
Aorun zhaoi, dating from approximately 161 million years ago. It is the oldest
coelurosaur yet discovered. • Researchers cure
epilepsy in mice using transplanted brain cells. 's
SpaceShipTwo suborbital
spaceplane (pictured with
White Knight Two mothership) makes its first rocket-powered flight. • 6 May • It is shown that boosting a single gene can increase the maximum lifespan of
fruit flies by over 25 percent. • European researchers announce a potential cure for
grey hair. • American scientists transform skin cells into bone cells using induced
pluripotent methods, in which the cells were grown on scaffolding, allowing them to gain a 3D structure. This is the first time a fully functioning three-dimensional bone structure has been created from cell lines. • A new study finds that children whose parents suck on their
pacifiers have fewer
allergies later in life. • Solar engineers discover a method of increasing the efficiency of standard commercial silicon
solar cells from 19% to 23%. • 7 May • A new study suggests that all Europeans are related to a small group of ancestors dating back only 1,000 years. • Researchers discover statistical but controversial evidence for the proposed
Eurasiatic language superfamily, dating back 15,000 years. • Scientists identify what may be the earliest known
pachycephalosaur,
Acrotholus audeti. • The
Alzheimer's drug
Gammagard fails to produce results in a large-scale
clinical trial. • 8 May – Researchers achieve a significant breakthrough in understanding
genital herpes, which could lead to the development of a vaccine to prevent and treat HSV-2. • 9 May • In a breakthrough they describe as "huge", researchers have identified a protein that reduces heart size and thickness in mice. This could potentially offer a way of treating
heart failure and
aging in humans. • A congressional hearing by two
U. S. House of Representatives subcommittees discusses exoplanet discoveries, prompted by the discovery of the
exoplanet Kepler-62f, along with
Kepler-62e and
Kepler-62c. A related special issue of the journal
Science, published earlier, described the discovery of the exoplanets. • 10 May • An
annular solar eclipse occurs. • The concentration of
carbon dioxide () in
Earth's atmosphere reaches a symbolic milestone, passing 400 ppm (parts per million) for the first time in human history. • Researchers create a form of
magnetic graphene that could transform the
electronics industry. • The
Royal Canadian Mounted Police report the first known case of a life being saved by a
search and rescue drone. • 11 May – Researchers develop a thermal invisibility device, measuring 5 cm wide, able to "cloak" objects from heat. • 12 May – It is discovered that
Utricularia gibba, a carnivorous
bladderwort plant, has the shortest known
DNA sequence of any multicellular plant. It largely lacks "
junk DNA", sequences of code that do not encode
proteins. • 13 May – Researchers at NYU school of Medicine identify a key protein mutation, called Ras, that is the mechanism through which
pancreatic cancer cells acquire nutrients. • 14 May – Iranian scientists create
copper iodide nanostructures by applying
pomegranate juice as a
reducer. genes in
baboons, potentially leading to new drugs to treat
heart disease in humans. • 15 May • Human embryonic
stem cells are created by
cloning for the first time, with major implications for treating a wide range of diseases. • NASA reports that a
reaction wheel on the
Kepler space observatory may be malfunctioning and may result in the premature termination of the observatory's search for Earth-like
exoplanets. • Four genes implicated in "bad"
cholesterol have been identified in
baboons, a finding that could pave the way for new drugs to prevent human heart disease. • New fossils provide physical evidence that the evolutionary split between
apes and
monkeys may have occurred "25 to 30 million years ago", as long suggested by DNA findings. • New evidence suggests that
Mount Everest's glaciers are melting. • Scientists release pictures of what they believe the lost city of
La Ciudad Blanca in
La Mosquitia,
Honduras. • A new study finds that the
white blood cell levels in men decrease faster during aging than in women, possibly providing one clue as to why women have longer average lifespans. •
Fish have been migrating to the
poles for decades, due to climate change, according to a new study. • A team of Iranian researchers studies
nanotechnology applications in
neuroscience, reporting new results regarding medicine and drug delivery for the brain and nerves. • 16 May • Water dating back 2.6 billion years, by far the oldest ever found, is discovered in a Canadian mine. • Mild
electric shock is shown to provide a lasting improvement to
mathematical ability. • A new world record has been achieved in wireless data transfer, with 40 Gbit/s transferred at 240 GHz over a distance of one kilometer. • 21 May • Genetic samples from a museum specimen have revealed the pathogen that caused the 19th-century
Great Famine of Ireland. The strain is now thought to be extinct. • By blocking a protein known as
NF-kB that is secreted by the
hypothalamus, researchers extend the lifespan of laboratory mice by 20 percent. • 22 May • Plans are approved for the world's biggest
wave farm in north-west
Scotland, with an intended power-generation capacity of 40MW. • In a significant move to address
climate change,
China announces that it will impose a cap on carbon emissions by 2016. • Researchers at
Purdue University in
West Lafayette,
Indiana, report that Earth is pushing the Moon away more quickly than it has done for most of the past 50 million years. • Researchers in France confirm that atypical activation of different
genes distinct to other tissues occur in all kinds of
cancer. Tumor cells in
lung cancer, for example, express genes, which should be silent, particular to male
sperm production. According to the researchers, "The methodical recognition of ectopic gene activations in cancer cells could serve as a basis for gene signature–guided tumor stratification". • 23 May – Very early symptoms of
Huntington's disease, such as
depression and anxiety, can be prevented in mice by switching off a
protein, according to a new study. • 25 May – A
penumbral lunar eclipse occurs. • 26 May – Using new
algorithms, researchers generate accurate images of sub-cellular structures in milliseconds rather than minutes. specimens (
Marchantia pictured) which had been frozen inert in glacial ice for 400 years. • 27 May • Four-hundred-year-old
bryophyte specimens left behind by retreating
glaciers in Canada are brought back to life in the laboratory. • Archaeologists announce the discovery of nearly 5,000 cave paintings, some of which may date back as early as 6,000 BC, near
Burgos, Mexico. • 28 May – The first
graphene-based circuits to break the
gigahertz barrier are created by researchers in the US and
Italy. • 29 May •
Aurornis xui is described as the most
basal species of
Avialae, potentially unseating
Archaeopteryx as the oldest known
bird. •
Soyuz TMA-09M is launched from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome, transporting a three-person crew to the
International Space Station. • Russian scientists announce the discovery of
mammoth blood and well-preserved muscle tissue from an adult female specimen in
Siberia. • The
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) discovers 28
asteroid families through the
Jupiter-
Mars chief
asteroid belt. It also finds a large number of formerly concealed and unclassified asteroids through
infrared snapshots for the first time. • A team of chemists and physicists from
Japan's
Yokohama National University produce a material that can be developed into mixed, conductive 3D formations, enabling scientists to create customized brain
electrodes. • For the first time, astronomers observe a spinning
neutron star suddenly slowing down. •
Freescale Semiconductor introduces KL02, a millimeter-scale microchip that contains almost all the components of a tiny functioning computer. • 30 May • New analysis suggests that
turtles evolved a shell 40 million years earlier than previously thought. •
Stanford University researchers unveil a
zinc-air battery that is more energy-dense and cheaper than
lithium-ion counterparts. • Researchers create the first-ever high-resolution images of a molecule as it breaks and reforms chemical bonds. • Biomedical researchers at
SCRM in
Edinburgh, Scotland, successfully synthesize
human blood using
stem cells. • Researchers at
Nanyang Technological University invent a
graphene-based sensor that is 1,000 times more sensitive to light than traditional
CMOS or
CCD sensors. • Within a century, climate change will threaten extinction for 82 percent of California's native fish, according to researchers at UC Davis.
(285263) 1998 QE2 (pictured) and its orbiting
moon pass close to the Earth. • 31 May •
NASA scientists report a possible
human mission to Mars may involve a great
radiation risk, based on the amount of
energetic particle radiation detected by the
RAD on the
Mars Science Laboratory while traveling from the
Earth to
Mars in 2011–2012. • NASA astronomers report that the
near-Earth asteroid 1998 QE2 is passing 3.6 million miles away from the Earth. 1998 QE2 reportedly has its own
asteroid moon. • Researches find fragments of
meteorites in pieces of
ancient Egyptian jewellery, which were discovered in a cemetery dating back to roughly 3,300 BC near
Cairo in 1911. • Researchers at the
University of Birmingham develop an effective
hearing aid based on the ear structure of a species of fly,
Ormia ochracea.
June • 1 June –
The New York Times reports that "the United States is far and away the world leader in
medical spending, even though numerous studies have concluded that Americans do not get better care." • 4 June • A new treatment to "reset" the immune system of
multiple sclerosis patients is reported to reduce their reactivity to
myelin by 50 to 75 percent. • A newly discovered prehistoric lizard,
Barbaturex morrisoni, is named after
Doors singer
Jim Morrison, who called himself "The Lizard King". • Microchip maker
Intel launches its
Haswell series of processors, offering better graphics performance and battery efficiency over the previous processor generation. are launched and indicate that nearly all major technical possibilities for
mass surveillance are being proactively exploited. • Scientists report
fossil remains of
Archicebus achilles, a
primate considered to be the "earliest well-preserved
fossil primate ever found," dating back an estimated 55 million years. • Researchers made a new discovery about
tumors in
hominids. They report the finding of the first known tumor in the rib of a
Neanderthal man who lived more than 120,000 years ago. • The multi-year
global surveillance disclosures are launched and indicate that nearly all major technical possibilities for
mass surveillance that emerged in recent decades – such as in Internet infrastructure, software, smartphones and other
IC technologies – are proactively exploited or attempted to be exploited by secret services with a public rationale of counter-terrorism. • 6 June • For the first time in the United States, a
bioengineered blood vessel is transplanted into a patient's arm. The patient, a man with end-stage kidney disease, is part of a clinical trial of laboratory-grown veins. • Scientists state that most male birds have no
penis. They ejaculate
sperm out of an exit opening named a
cloaca, which is also used for excreting
urine and
feces. • Scientists at the
IAA-CSIC report the detection of
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the
upper atmosphere of
Titan, the largest
moon of the
planet Saturn. • 7 June –
Breastfeeding boosts brain development compared to
formula-fed babies, according to a new study. • 10 June • Scientists report that the
earlier claims of an
Earth-like exoplanet orbiting
Alpha Centauri B, a
star close to our
Solar System, may not be supported by astronomical evidence. • A new
skyscraper elevator is demonstrated using
carbon fiber cables to reach heights of or higher in a single trip, without passengers needing to change lifts. • 11 June • Scientists at the
University of Nottingham discover a previously undetected layer in the human
cornea, dubbed
Dua's layer. • The world's first commercially available 5-GHz computer processor is unveiled by
AMD. • 12 June • A new study suggests that
altitude plays a role in
language evolution, explaining why
ejective sounds are more popular in languages of high-altitude regions. • Taking the
AIDS drug
tenofovir greatly reduces the risk of
HIV infection among
intravenous drug users, according to a new study. • Scientists discover a method to use pressure to make a material expand instead of compress/contract. The pressure-treated material has half the density of the first state. rules that non-synthetic
genes cannot be
patented by medical companies. • 13 June •
Sleep researchers state that natural sleep allows the brain to combine emotional memory, and also find that a popular sleeping drug heightens the recollection of and response to negative memories. •
Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc.: The
Supreme Court of the United States rules that naturally occurring
genes may not be
patented, with significant implications for future medical research. • 14 June • American researchers identify a key embryonic
protein that, though usually deactivated shortly after birth, is reactivated in patients with advanced cancer. This breakthrough may allow for better treatment of advanced cancer cases, which typically respond poorly to currently available therapies. As a result of this discovery, scientists may be able to determine from the structure of the protein the fundamental process through which cancer cells seek out new tumor sites and create secondary tumors after leaving the primary tumor site. • Scientists combine
synchrotron X-rays with scanning tunneling microscopy to create highly detailed images of different materials at the atomic level. By combining the two methods, researchers are now able to not only see where individual atoms reside but also determine a material's chemical and magnetic properties. This discovery could have wide applications in accelerating discoveries in a number of fields, particularly in
nanotechnology. •
Sharp Corporation achieves the highest
solar cell energy conversion efficiency to date, of approximately 44.4%, using a concentrator triple-junction compound solar cell. • 17 June •
TOP500 reports that
China's
Tianhe-2 supercomputer is the world's most powerful computer, capable of performing over 33 quadrillion
floating point operations per second. • Physicists report the possible detection of a new
subatomic particle,
Zc(3900), a
hadron which may be the first
tetraquark to have been observed experimentally. • Two separate teams independently develop prototype flying
bicycles. British engineers construct a hybrid bicycle-
paraglider capable of flying to an altitude of , while a
Czech team demonstrates a multi-
rotor electric "hoverbike" that can hover like a
helicopter at low altitudes. • Engineers demonstrate a small quadrupedal "
cheetah-cub" robot, with speed and agility approaching that of a real
cat. The prototype is intended as the basis for future search-and-rescue robots with vastly greater speed and agility than human emergency workers. • Weapons manufacturer
MBDA Germany develops a high-powered
laser weapon capable of targeting and destroying incoming rockets, artillery shells and
UAVs. • 18 June •
Google launches a fleet of high-altitude
balloons capable of beaming wireless internet to remote locations far more cheaply than
satellites. • American scientists use
3D printing to manufacture a new class of microscopic
batteries, which may allow the easy production of extremely small medical devices,
nanorobots and communications systems. • British researchers develop high-resolution 3D
holograms for the teaching of
anatomy to medical students. • 19 June – Scientists claim that "cancerproof" laboratory animals, such as
naked mole-rats, may not get
cancer because they produce an "extremely high-molecular-mass
hyaluronan", which is over "five times larger" than that in cancer-prone humans and cancer-susceptible laboratory animals. particles are found to massively increase the effectiveness of
antibiotics. • 20 June • Adding
silver particles to
antibiotics makes them 10 to 1,000 times more effective at fighting infections, research suggests. • International neuroscientists produce a full-3D map of a human brain, scanning and digitizing thousands of ultrathin slices of the brain to determine its structure at extremely high resolution. The map will be made freely available to medical researchers worldwide. • During the
Shenzhou 10 mission, Chinese astronauts deliver the country's first public video broadcast from the orbiting
Tiangong-1 space laboratory. • The European
Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (IXV), an experimental spacecraft which is intended to make its first orbital launch in 2014, successfully conducts a parachute drop test over the
Mediterranean Sea. • Physicists develop a table-top
particle accelerator with 2 gigaelectronvolts (GeV) of power, downsizing a conventional accelerator by a factor of 10,000. • American engineers create a functional, rechargeable nanoscale battery out of
wood. The conductive wooden fibers, coated with
tin, are longer-lasting than any previous nanoscale battery. • The
Israeli-based company NeuroDerm reports good trial results for a new
Parkinson's disease treatment, which involves dermal introduction of two separate drugs. • 21 June – Following groundbreaking laboratory tests, researchers discover that plants make use of
quantum effects to efficiently channel
photons during
photosynthesis. • 23 June • Scientists find that plants use complex mathematical calculations, similar to human
circadian rhythms, to adjust their energy usage. • Following a large-scale
genome study, researchers identify some of the biological roots of
migraine, a chronic neurological condition affecting as many as 15% of all humans. • The 2013
Paris Air Show concludes, after a week of new technology demonstrations including a "green" electric
airliner taxiing system, the world's first
electric tiltrotor prototype, and advanced
avionics and
in-flight entertainment systems. • 24 June • Researchers from
Duke University detect
methane in
drinking water in
Pennsylvania, claiming that "serious contamination from bubbly methane is 'much more' prevalent in some water wells within 1 kilometer of
gas drilling sites". The researchers note that methane levels are "an average of six times" higher and
ethane levels are "23 times higher" in the water wells "closer to drilling sites, compared with those farther away." • The 10,000th
near-Earth object is discovered by astronomers at the
University of Hawaii. • 25 June – In an unprecedented discovery, astronomers detect three potentially Earthlike
exoplanets orbiting a single star in the
Gliese 667 system. • 26 June • China's
Shenzhou 10 crewed spacecraft returns safely to Earth, having conducted China's longest human space mission to date. • American scientists partially heal
spinal cord injuries in paralyzed rats by transplanting
nerve cells into the injury sites. These laboratory trials are hoped to be a precursor to human trials in the near future. • Ancient
horse bones dating back 700,000 years are found to contain by far the oldest preserved DNA sequence yet discovered, predating all previous finds by 500,000 years. " beams in
optical fibers, allowing for extremely high-bandwidth data transfer. • 27 June •
Japanese scientists produce a healthy
cloned mouse from cells contained in a single drop of blood. • British geologists report that 1.3 quadrillion cubic feet of
shale gas are present in shale formations in northern England, potentially heralding a transformation of the British energy market. • Researchers create
genetically engineered wheat strains resistant to the fungal disease
stem rust, which is a constant threat to wheat crops in the developing world. • Scientists demonstrate an
optical fiber that uses "
twisted light" to transmit massive amounts of information, potentially revolutionizing the field of data transfer. The prototype fiber was able to transmit data at rates of over one
terabit per second. • US and German scientists develop a simple and efficient new method for
desalinating seawater, using a small electric field to separate salt from water without needing complex filter membranes. • US and
Swiss researchers develop a new form of telescopic
contact lens designed to improve the vision of those with age-related
macular degeneration, which previously could not be ameliorated with contact lenses. •
Molecular biologists successfully trap a
ribosome in the middle of its
protein-forming state, allowing them to study the precise motions it uses to translate genetic code into functional proteins. This discovery sheds new light on the basic building-blocks of life, and may allow the development of new antibiotics. • 28 June –
MIT engineers invent a handheld "
X-ray vision" device which allows users to detect movement through walls.
July • 1 July •
Neptune's moon
Neptune XIV is discovered. • The
Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope releases new data on the highest-energy regions of the observable universe, including over 500 new
gamma-ray bursts. • 2 July • Drinking several cups of coffee daily appears to reduce the risk of
suicide in men and women by about 50%, according to a new study by Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers. • Using computer modelling and solar data, Scottish scientists determine that the last living species on Earth in the distant future will be
extremophile microbes able to survive harsh conditions. •
Microsoft develops a 3D
touchscreen that uses force sensors and a robotic arm to allow users to "feel" objects that it displays. • The first
Maersk Triple E-class container ships, the largest and most energy-efficient cargo vessels yet constructed, begin sea trials. • The two most recently discovered
moons of Pluto are officially named
Styx and
Kerberos. transplants are found to eliminate all traces of
HIV (virus particles pictured) in two male patients. • 3 July • In a breakthrough for
regenerative medicine, Japanese scientists grow functional
livers from stem cells and successfully transplant them into mice. • It is reported that naval
sonar can seriously disrupt the behavior of
whales, potentially causing them to fatally beach themselves. •
Bone marrow transplants are found to remove all traces of
HIV from two test patients, in conjunction with
antiretroviral treatments. • A
New Zealand student designs a "skeletal"
3D-printable orthopedic cast that offers far greater lightness, cleanliness and ventilation than conventional casts, and can be personalized to suit individual patients and specific injuries. • 4 July • The
London Array, at the time the world's largest offshore
wind farm, opens in the UK. • A US study reveals that remaining mentally and physically active in old age is key to slowing the onset of
dementia. • 5 July • European researchers create molecular
nanowires which are ultra-sensitive to ambient
magnetic fields, requiring no actual magnetic materials to change their electrical conductivity. The invention, which is similar to the system used for navigation by migratory birds, could have numerous applications in electronics, from improved magnetic sensors and
hard disk drives to enhanced
smartphones. • Scientists record
X-ray videos of
bats in flight, revealing the highly efficient skeletal motion that allows them to fly. This data could be used to design new, more efficient flying robots. • 6 July • The
Solar Impulse aircraft completes the first cross-country flight over the United States powered entirely by
solar energy. • Scientists report that a wide variety of microbial life exists in the
subglacial Antarctic
Lake Vostok, which has been buried in ice for around 15 million years. Samples of the lake's water obtained by drilling were found to contain traces of DNA from over 3,000 tiny organisms. • 8 July •
Nanoparticles of
rust could be used to efficiently generate
hydrogen fuel from sunlight and water, according to a scientific study. • Researchers state that the first baby conceived with a new, cheaper, more efficient form of
IVF is born healthy. aircraft (photographed above in 2011) becomes the first entirely
solar-powered airplane to complete a flight across the United States. • 9 July • Scientists develop a blood test for babies that can reportedly predict a person's long-term health and rate of ageing in later life. • A radical new theory of the composition of the
Earth's core is published. It proposes that the shape of the solid
iron core is determined by the atomic structure of the different forms of iron of which it consists. •
North Carolina State University researchers demonstrate a method of
3D printing liquid metal at room temperature, forming freestanding structures which maintain their shape despite initially remaining liquid. The invention, which uses an alloy of
gallium and
indium, could allow electronic circuitry and even flexible wiring to be printed on demand. • 10 July • French scientists construct an ultra-precise
optical lattice clock that misses only one second in 300 million years. The clock's measurements could form a new basis for global time standards, replacing the present generation of
atomic clocks. • The American
Northrop Grumman X-47B becomes the first
drone to perform an arrested landing on an
aircraft carrier at sea. • 11 July • For the first time, astronomers determine the true colour of a distant
exoplanet.
HD 189733 b, a searing-hot
gas giant, is said to be a vivid blue colour, most likely due to clouds of
silica in its atmosphere. • Italian scientists successfully treat the symptoms of
leukodystrophy in six young children using
gene therapy. •
DARPA and
Boston Dynamics unveil the
Atlas humanoid robot, a autonomous machine capable of a wide variety of military and disaster-response operations. • The Canadian
AeroVelo team wins the
Igor Sikorsky Prize for developing a fully functional
human-powered helicopter, 33 years after the competition began. • 12 July – British engineers develop a high-velocity penetrator probe capable of surviving impact forces of 20,000
gravities. The probe could be used to punch through the icy surface of
Jupiter's moon
Europa to search for aquatic life. • 15 July • Scientists
sequence the genomes of 201
microbe species in an effort to gain a more detailed understanding of Earth's microbial ecosystem. • The
Hubble Space Telescope photographs a new moon of
Neptune, the
14th to be discovered so far. It is estimated to be just across. • NASA engineers successfully test a
rocket engine with a fully 3D-printed injector, proving that critical rocket components can be produced through 3D printing without compromising their effectiveness. •
Seismologists report that small
earthquakes occur in a sequence with rapidly increasing frequency prior to a
volcanic eruption. The discovery, described as a "seismic scream", could help predict future eruptions. (photographed above) becomes the first
robotic aircraft to successfully land on an
aircraft carrier at sea. • 16 July • NASA's
Curiosity rover reaches a milestone in its journey across
Mars, having travelled since its landing in 2012. • Researchers develop artificial
peroxisomes that can reduce toxic oxygen compounds. This could lead to novel drugs that influence processes directly inside living cells. • 17 July • American scientists develop a method of "switching off" the extra
chromosome that causes
Down's syndrome, potentially offering an entirely new treatment for the condition. • British medical researchers create an "intelligent" surgical knife with a built-in
mass spectrometer that can detect
cancerous tissue during operations, allowing surgeons to more accurately and effectively excise
tumors without damaging healthy tissue. •
Swedish scientists create a
magnesium carbonate-based material with an unparalleled surface-area-to-volume ratio and excellent water absorption abilities. The new material, dubbed "Upsalite", could have applications in many fields, including electronics, toxic waste cleanup, sanitation and medical drug delivery. • In an unprecedented discovery, astronomers directly observe the destruction of a gas cloud larger than Earth's solar system by the
supermassive black hole at the galactic core. • Based on 34 earlier studies, researchers identify remarkable similarities between
the brains of birds and humans. • 18 July – A "giant" new genus of virus,
Pandoravirus, is announced, along with two recently identified species,
Pandoravirus dulcis and
Pandoravirus salinus. • 19 July • Japan begins a clinical trial of
stem cells harvested from patients' own bodies. The stem cells will be used to treat
age-related macular degeneration. • NASA scientists publish the results of a new analysis of the
atmosphere of Mars, reporting a lack of
methane around the
landing site of the
Curiosity rover. In addition, the scientists found evidence that Mars "has lost a good deal of its atmosphere over time", based on the abundance of isotopic compositions of gases, particularly those related to
argon and
carbon. • Japanese researchers confirm that
muon-type
neutrinos can spontaneously flip to the
electron type, potentially explaining the imbalance of matter and
antimatter during the
Big Bang. •
Harvard University medical experts report that a carefully targeted two-drug treatment could be tailored to successfully treat almost any form of cancer. • For the third time in history, Earth is photographed from the outer solar system. NASA's
Cassini spacecraft releases images of the Earth and Moon taken from the orbit of
Saturn. photographs the
Earth and
Moon (visible bottom-right) from
Saturn. • 21 July • British scientists successfully cure blindness in mice with infusions of stem cells that repaired damaged
retinas. It is hoped that a similar treatment can be developed for humans. • A
private spaceflight venture announces plans to land a robotic observatory on the
south pole of the Moon. • American researchers develop a flexible, sensitive "
electronic skin" that mimics real human skin by detecting and responding to different levels of pressure. • 22 July • Scientists report that
dolphins have unique vocal names for one another, which they respond to just as humans do. • Scientists studying data from the
Large Hadron Collider report an extremely rare
particle decay event, casting doubt on the scientific theory of
supersymmetry. • 23 July –
Thor's hero shrew, the first known sister species to the
armored shrew, is described. • 24 July – A scientific study warns that a major release of
methane from melting
Arctic ice could have immense climatic and economic impacts worldwide. • 25 July • British scientists discover the mechanism which causes human
allergy to cats. A cure for the allergy may become commercially available within five years. • Scientists successfully implant
false memories into the brains of mice. This breakthrough could lead to a fuller understanding of human memory. • 26 July – Scientists demonstrate a
GM-free process that could dramatically reduce
nitrogen pollution. It allows virtually all of the world's crop species to automatically obtain up to 60% of their nitrogen requirements from air, as opposed to
fertilisers. • 28 July – A new DNA probe allows researchers to look for mutations in long sequences of up to 200
base pairs, compared to only 20 pairs using conventional methods. • 29 July – Astronomers discover the first
exoplanet orbiting a
brown dwarf, 6,000 light years from Earth. • 31 July • An artificial human-like
ear is grown in a lab, using a flexible wire frame to support tissue cultures from cows and sheep. • New data from the
Large Hadron Collider – based on measurements of the
B meson – could offer the first direct hint of
new physics beyond the Standard Model.
August • 1 August •
Michigan State University reports that
climate change is fueling larger and more destructive
wildfires in the United States, a trend that is set to continue. • Efficient
chemical synthesis of
ingenol mebutate is achieved for the first time. This compound – found in the plant genus
Euphorbia – is of great interest to drug developers for its
anticarcinogenic properties. • 2 August • The
American Meteorological Society releases its peer-reviewed State of the Climate report, showing how the impacts of
global warming are worsening. • A new "super-glass" coating produced by
Harvard University researchers could lead to self-cleaning, scratch-resistant windows and other surfaces. • 5 August • The world's first
hamburger made entirely of lab-grown
in-vitro meat is eaten in London. • A Japanese company develops a reusable skin patch which can treat chronic high
blood pressure by constantly releasing
bisoprolol into the bloodstream. It is reported to be safer than conventional blood pressure medication, and is easier to use for patients with swallowing problems. • Full-colour, 3D infrared images have been created by researchers, giving molecular-level chemical information of specimens in unprecedented detail. • 7 August • A new study of the
cosmic microwave background has looked back to within 100,000 years of the
Big Bang, the furthest that has yet been observed. • A new
deep brain stimulation device can simultaneously record brain activity while delivering therapy. It is hoped the automated system could reveal major insights into a range of neurological and psychological diseases. • 8 August • In its latest trial, a new
malaria vaccine has been shown to be 100 percent effective. • A breakthrough in tissue engineering has allowed scientists to 'grow' the first true cartilage. The researchers believe entire organs may be possible by 2025. • 12 August – A gene linked to idiopathic focal epilepsy (IFE) has been identified by MedUni Vienna researchers. • 14 August • In the largest-ever analysis of cancer genomes, researchers have discovered the genetic imprints and signatures left by DNA-damaging processes that lead to
cancer. • Scientists have built a fully functional mouse heart from human tissues. •
Seagrass is 35 times more efficient at
absorbing carbon than rainforests, according to research by the University of Technology, Sydney. • 15 August • For the first time in 35 years, a new carnivorous mammal species – the
olinguito – has been discovered in the Western Hemisphere. • NASA announces that the failing
Kepler space observatory may never fully recover. New missions are being considered. • Extreme
heat waves are likely to quadruple by 2040, according to new research. • Biologists from Tel Aviv University publish a, first of its kind, study on homosexual behavior among insect species. • 17 August – In an unprecedented effort by ETH Zurich Laboratories, computational quantum teleportation has been achieved in solid-state circuit. Using quantum entanglement methods, researchers have teleported approximately 10,000 qubits (quantum bits) per second on a specially designed chip. • 21 August – The lowest temperature at which single-celled organisms can live and grow is −20 °C, according to new research. • 22 August • A study has found more evidence that
nanoparticles may be entering the human food supply, with potentially harmful effects. • A study has found that
urban environments may cause increased brain size in animals. • NASA has released new images and a video of its planned asteroid capture mission. • 27 August • The previous discovery of a new chemical element with atomic number 115 (
moscovium) has been confirmed at
GSI by researchers from Lund University in Sweden. • NASA reports that the Mars
Curiosity rover used an
Autonomous Navigation System (or
"autonav" - the ability of the rover to decide for itself how to drive safely) over unknown ground for the first time. • University of Washington researchers have performed what they believe is the first noninvasive human-to-human brain interface, with one researcher able to send a brain signal via the Internet to control the hand motions of a fellow researcher. • 28 August • Miniature, pea-sized human brains have been grown in the laboratory from stem cells. • Cooling waters in the tropical Pacific Ocean appear to be a major factor in dampening global warming in recent years, scientists say. • UK researchers have created the world's fastest spinning man-made object, achieving 600 million revolutions per minute. • 29 August • By reducing the action of a single gene,
mTor, researchers have increased the average lifespan of mice by 20 percent. Their research also shows that the effects of aging are not uniform. • The
East Antarctic Ice Sheet could be more
vulnerable to climate change than previously thought, based on a new analysis of satellite imagery going back 50 years. • A NASA mission has revealed a new
canyon – 460 miles (750 km) long and 2,600 feet (800 meters) deep in places – hidden below Greenland's ice sheet. This is longer than the
Grand Canyon.
September • 1 September – Rising global temperatures are driving
crop pests to higher and lower latitudes at nearly 3 kilometres per year, threatening global food security. • 2 September – A team of international scientists has achieved a major breakthrough in
nanosensing. • 3 September • A new analysis indicates the amount of
raw materials used to produce goods is far higher than previously thought. • Phase I clinical trials of
SAV001 – the first and only preventative
HIV vaccine – have been successfully completed with no adverse effects in all patients.
Antibody production was greatly boosted after vaccination. • 5 September • It has been confirmed that an
undersea volcano in the northern Pacific is not a group of several volcanos. This makes it the largest confirmed volcano on Earth. • Stanford researchers use DNA to assemble a transistor from graphene. • Two leading neurology researchers claim that
prion-like proteins that misfold and aggregate into harmful "seeds" are responsible for brain diseases associated with aging. • 6 September • The
Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) is launched by NASA. It will measure the extremely thin atmosphere that surrounds the Moon. • Researchers have developed a new method for improving the connections between stacked solar cells. It allows them to operate at concentrations of 70,000 suns worth of energy without losing much voltage as "wasted energy" or heat. • Phase 1 clinical trials of an implantable vaccine to treat
melanoma have been initiated. • The
National Institutes of Health has awarded grants of $17 million to eight research teams, with a focus on
nanopore technology aimed at more accurate and efficient DNA sequencing. • 11 September • Three ancient rivers may once have crossed the
Sahara, allowing early humans to cross from Africa into the Mediterranean about 100,000 years ago, based on a new study. • Huge new reserves of
groundwater have been found in
Turkana County, northern Kenya. •
Trees are speeding up their life cycles in response to climate change, backing up the results of an earlier study. • Rapidly melting sea ice is causing
ocean acidification in the
Arctic to occur at faster rates than previously forecast, with serious implications for the
food web, according to new research. • 12 September • NASA announces that
Voyager I has officially left the
Solar System, having travelled since 1977. • Americans are living longer and more healthily than ever before, according to one of the most comprehensive studies of its kind. There was a 3.8-year increase in average life expectancy during the previous two decades, with quality-adjusted life expectancy (QALE) also increasing. However, there was a notable rise in
anxiety among young and middle-aged people beginning in 2001. • 14 September – The
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) has launched its first
Epsilon rocket, a new generation of smaller and cheaper launch vehicles. • 18 September –
Orbital Sciences launches the first
Cygnus spacecraft. It is designed to transport supplies to the
International Space Station (ISS). • 19 September – Scientists working with the
Curiosity rover on the planet
Mars report "no detection of
atmospheric methane with a measured value of ppbv corresponding to an upper limit of only 1.3 ppbv (95% confidence limit)" and, as a result, conclude that the probability of "current methanogenic microbial activity on Mars" is reduced. • 20 September • Researchers from Cambridge University in England have developed a new technique allowing
carbon nanotube "forests" to be grown at five times the density of previous methods. • Researchers have identified a protein involved in the spread of
brain tumours. • 22 September – Researchers have created a "blueprint" for a universal flu vaccine which they say could be available within five years. • 23 September – A new world record
solar cell efficiency of 44.7% has been achieved. • 24 September • The first evidence of
whisper-like behavior in non-human primates has been observed. • Astronomers have discovered the
densest known galaxy, with over 10,000 stars packed into four light years. • Long-term data shows that the
Greenland Sea is warming 10 times faster than the global ocean. • A new genetic analysis shows that the first rapid population growth of humans occurred in the
Paleolithic (60,000-80,000 years ago), rather than the more recent
Neolithic as previously thought. • The
Late Cretaceous period was likely ice-free, with implications for Earth's future climate, based on new research. • 25 September • The first mind-controlled prosthetic leg has been created. • A new form of matter has been created that induces photons to behave like a
Star Wars light-sabre. • The first computer made entirely of
carbon nanotubes has been created by Stanford University engineers. It has a 1 bit processor, runs at 1 kHz and features 178 transistors, with 10-200 nanotubes per transistor. • 26 September • Palaeontologists have discovered a fossil of the oldest known creature with a
jaw, dating back 419 million years. • NASA scientists report the
Mars Curiosity rover detected "abundant, easily accessible"
water (1.5 to 3 weight percent) in
soil samples at the
Rocknest region of
Aeolis Palus in
Gale Crater. In addition, the rover found two principal soil types: a fine-grained
mafic type and a locally derived, coarse-grained
felsic type. The mafic type, similar to other
martian soils and
martian dust, was associated with hydration of the amorphous phases of the soil. • 27 September • The FDA approves the first
artificial pancreas. • Nanoscale resolution MRI has been experimentally achieved. • The first document from the
IPCC Fifth Assessment Report – Working Group I's summary for policymakers – is released. It states that warming of the global climate system is "unequivocal", with a 95% probability that humans are the main cause. • 30 September • Astronomers have created the first cloud map of an
exoplanet,
Kepler-7b. • The first commercial-scale
carbon capture and
mineralization plant begins construction in the United States. When completed in 2014, it will capture 300,000 tons of CO2 annually.
October • 1 October – New fossils of pollen grains show that
flowering plants evolved 100 million years earlier than previously thought, in the
Early Triassic (252 to 247 million years ago) or even earlier. • 3 October • Environmental impacts on the world's
oceans are even worse than previously thought, according to a new report. • Using
genetic engineering, researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles, have boosted production of
ethanol biofuel by 50 percent. • 4 October – Researchers from MIT have created self-assembling robots, based on small cubes that can propel themselves and snap together to form shapes. • 6 October – Giant channels up to 250m tall have been discovered beneath
Antarctica, stretching for hundreds of kilometres. Researchers say these will help in modelling the future stability and dynamics of the ice sheet. • 7 October • The
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to
James E. Rothman,
Randy W. Schekman and
Thomas C. Südhof, for their work on how
vesicles fuse with
cell membranes, releasing their contents. • It is reported that researchers at the
National Ignition Facility in California produced more energy from a
fusion reaction than the fuel absorbed in igniting it – the first time this has been achieved by researchers anywhere in the world. • A new study concludes that research to delay
aging would have greater social and economic benefits than advances in cancer, heart disease and other individual diseases. • 8 October • The
Nobel Prize in Physics has been awarded to
François Englert and
Peter Higgs "for the theoretical discovery of a
mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of mass of subatomic particles, and which recently was confirmed through the discovery of the predicted fundamental particle, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN's
Large Hadron Collider". • Researchers in Germany have taken a major step towards using
graphene in solar cells, which could boost their
efficiency. The material was found to retain its properties even when coated with silicon. • 9 October • The
Nobel Prize in Chemistry was awarded to
Arieh Warshel,
Martin Karplus and
Michael Levitt "for the development of multiscale models for complex chemical systems". • A new microscopic technique allows researchers to image structures as small as 80 nm anywhere inside a cell. • 10 October – Researchers have discovered the first chemical to prevent all brain cell death from
prion disease in mice. This could lead to drug targets for a range of neurodegenerative conditions in humans - including Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's disease. • 11 October • The
Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (
OPCW) and the "conventions under which it was founded in 1997" because they, according to the award citation, "have defined the use of
chemical weapons as a
taboo under
international law. Recent events in
Syria, where chemical weapons have again been put to use, have underlined the need to enhance the efforts to do away with such weapons." • The Graphene Flagship – a ten-year initiative with a billion euros of funding – is launched in Gothenburg, Sweden. • 14 October – The first fossil of a mosquito with definitive evidence of
blood has been discovered in northwestern Montana. The find dates back to the
Eocene, some 46 million years ago (the fossil provides only
evidence of blood, but not blood itself, so there is no DNA or anything cloneable). • 15 October –
Red Bull Stratos releases
POV video of
Felix Baumgartner skydiving jump from the
stratosphere (127,851 ft) on 14 October 2012. • 16 October • Russian authorities raise a large fragment, total weight, of the
Chelyabinsk meteor, a
Near-Earth asteroid that entered
Earth's atmosphere over
Russia on 15 February 2013, from the bottom of
Chebarkul lake. • Researchers have identified 127 repeatedly mutated genes that appear to drive the development and progression of a range of tumors in the body. • 17 October • A new fossil discovery suggests that
Homo habilis,
Homo rudolfensis and
Homo erectus may all have been part of a single species that later evolved into humans. • Researchers have shown that a fundamental reason for
sleep is to clean the brain of toxins. This is achieved by brain cells shrinking to create gaps between neurons, allowing fluid to wash through. • Using data accumulated over 10 years, researchers have estimated there are 390 billion trees in the
Amazon rainforest, divided into 16,000 different species. •
Geneticist Bryan Sykes and his team at
Oxford University report that
DNA analysis of presumed
Yeti (or "Abominable Snowman") samples may have come from a hybrid species of
bear produced from a mating between a
brown bear and a
polar bear. According to Sykes, "I think this bear, which nobody has seen alive, may still be there and may have quite a lot of polar bear in it. It may be some sort of hybrid and if its behaviour is different from normal bears, which is what eyewitnesses report, then I think that may well be the source of the mystery and the source of the legend." • 18 October – Researchers have discovered a source of gut stem cells that can repair a type of
inflammatory bowel disease when transplanted into mice. • 21 October – In the Amazon, droughts like that of
2005 may become the norm by 2100, according to a new study that claims the IPCC has underestimated the impacts on the southern part of the rainforest. • 22 October – Astronomers have discovered the 1,000th known
exoplanet. • 23 October • A new way of locating metal deposits including
gold has been discovered by researchers in Australia. The presence of tiny particles in a
eucalyptus tree's foliage can indicate that these resources are present deep underground. • Astronomers have discovered the most distant
galaxy to date. • 25 October • The
New Horizons probe is now within 5 AU of
Pluto. • Temperatures in the Eastern Arctic are now the highest since the beginning of the
last ice age 120,000 years ago, lying "well outside the range of natural variability", according to US researchers. • 27 October • An international team of researchers has doubled the known number of genes linked to
Alzheimers to 21. • A breakthrough in
artificial intelligence has been achieved, with a new software algorithm capable of solving
CAPTCHAs. • 28 October – The commercial viability of shale oil and gas has been questioned at a conference organised by the Geological Society of America. • 30 October – Doctors in China have regrown the face of a 17-year-old girl with burn injuries, using tissue from her chest. • 31 October – A new study adds weight to the idea that the oceans have absorbed some of the excess heat from recent global warming.
November • 3 November – A
total solar eclipse occurs. • 4 November – Astronomers report, based on
Kepler space mission data, that there could be as many as 40 billion
Earth-sized planets orbiting in the
habitable zones of
sun-like stars and
red dwarf stars within the
Milky Way Galaxy. 11 billion of these estimated planets may be orbiting sun-like stars. The nearest such planet may be 12 light-years away, according to the scientists. • 6 November • Researchers have found a way to shrink the volume of
nuclear waste by 90 percent. • Japanese researchers have demonstrated multi-component
nanoparticles that combine the properties of different materials. • People care more about the longer term when they make decisions in natural environments as opposed to urban, according to research by VU University Amsterdam. • 8 November – Scientists report the discovery of what may be the oldest complete
fossils on
Earth - a tiny
microbial mat associated with
sandstone rock in
western Australia estimated to be 3.48 billion years old. • 9 November – A major
iceberg measuring 700 square kilometers, roughly the size of Singapore, has broken away from West Antarctica. • 11 November • A new imaging technique can help to identify people at high risk of a
heart attack. • Using nanotechnology, researchers at Columbia University have created the world's smallest
FM radio. • 13 November • Globally, 2013 is likely to be among the top 10 hottest years since records began, according to a provisional statement from the
World Meteorological Organization. • NASA announces the names of two features on Mars important to two active
Mars exploration rovers in honor of
planetary scientist Bruce C. Murray (1931–2013): "Murray Ridge", an uplifted crater that the
Opportunity rover is exploring, and "Murray Buttes", an entryway the
Curiosity rover will traverse on its way to
Mount Sharp. • NASA has produced a video of how Mars may have appeared 4 billion years ago, with blue skies and water. • 14 November – Globally, there was a net loss of 1.5 million sq ft of forest between 2000 and 2012, based on 650,000 high-resolution satellite images. • 15 November – A fragile quantum memory state has been held stable at room temperature for a "world record" 39 minutes, 100 times longer than ever before. • 17 November • Researchers have made the first battery electrode that heals itself, repairing imperfections within a few hours. • The first "mini-kidneys" have been grown from human stem cells. • 18 November • The
MAVEN spacecraft, part of
NASA's
Mars Scout Program, is launched successfully. • Global CO2 emissions are on track to reach 36 billion tonnes in 2013, according to the
Global Carbon Project. • 20 November • A new
3D printing process developed at the University of Southern California could reduce production time from hours to minutes. • A new volcanic island rose from the Pacific Ocean, in the
Volcano Islands arc, and was provisionally named
Niijima • 21 November • NASA releases detailed data about a powerful
gamma-ray burst, designated
GRB 130427A, that was observed on 27 April 2013. • The
IceCube Neutrino Observatory has made the first discovery of very high energy
neutrinos on Earth which had originated from beyond our Solar System. • A potential new compound to treat
osteoporosis has shown promising results in mouse experiments. • 22 November • The
Swarm mission is launched by ESA. It will map the
Earth's magnetic field in unprecedented detail. • Researchers at Bonn University have identified an immune gene in humans that originated from
Neanderthals. • Paleontologists have described a newly found dinosaur,
Siats meekerorum, that lived 98 million years ago in the
Late Cretaceous. Based on analysis of a juvenile 30 ft specimen, the researchers say the adult version could have reached 40 ft (12 meters) in length – second only to
Tyrannosaurus rex in size, and holding back the dominance of that species until later in the epoch. • 24 November • Even if CO2 emissions stop, global warming will continue for centuries, according to a study by Princeton University. • Methane release from the Arctic seafloor is double previous estimates, new research has shown. • 25 November – NASA reports that the
Curiosity rover on
Mars has resumed full science operations, with no apparent loss of capability, after completing the diagnosis of an electrical problem first observed on 17 November. Apparently, an internal short in the rover's power source, the
Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator, caused an unusual and intermittent decrease in a voltage indicator on the rover. • 28 November – The
comet C/2012 S1 (ISON) passed roughly above the Sun's surface. Although it was highly anticipated that the comet would be visible to the naked eye on Earth once it orbited the Sun, it became increasingly evident that it had vaporized as it made its approach. Hours after it passed behind the Sun, a part of the comet re-emerged, though significantly smaller. Over the next 24 hours, it too, faded. • 29 November – Scientists report
Comet ISON may have survived its trip around the Sun.
December • 1 December – China launches the
Chang'e 3 lunar rover mission, with a planned landing on 16 December. • 2 December • A study of nearly 1,000 brain scans has revealed striking differences between men and women. • The CIOC (
NASA Comet ISON Observing Campaign) announces that
Comet ISON has fully disintegrated. The
Hubble Space Telescope failed to detect fragments of ISON on 18 December 2013. On 8 May 2014, a detailed examination of the comet disintegration was published, suggesting that the comet fully disintegrated hours before
perihelion. • 3 December – The
Hubble Space Telescope has found evidence of
water in the
atmospheres of five distant
exoplanets:
HD 209458b,
XO-1b,
WASP-12b,
WASP-17b and
WASP-19b. • 4 December • Researchers have discovered that a protein, PC7, plays an important role in
anxiety disorders and
trauma. • Scientists report the results of the oldest
human DNA found. The DNA is from a 400,000-year-old
hominin femur bone
fossil uncovered in
Spain and matches the DNA of extinct human
Denisovans that lived thousands of miles away in
Siberia. • Researchers at the
University of Southampton have identified undersea regions that could store huge volumes of
sequestered CO2, potentially helping to reverse
climate change. • 5 December – Researchers have used a human gut microbe to reverse
autism-like symptoms in mice. • 8 December – A new way of extracting
hydrogen from rocks and water, potentially offering a new green energy source, has been demonstrated by the University of Lyon. • 9 December •
NASA scientists report that the planet
Mars had a large
freshwater lake (which could have been a hospitable environment for
microbial life) based on evidence from the
Curiosity rover studying
Aeolis Palus near
Mount Sharp in
Gale Crater. • A newly discovered
greenhouse gas,
perfluorotributylamine, has been shown to have 7,100 times the heat-trapping ability of CO2. • 10 December – A new
record low temperature on Earth has been recorded, with NASA satellite data showing −94.7 °C (−138.5 °F) in a region of
East Antarctica. The previous record had been −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F), set in 1983 at
Vostok Station. • 11 December • The supervolcano that lies beneath
Yellowstone National Park in the US has a magma chamber that is 2.5 times bigger than earlier estimates suggested. • Ice loss from the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet is accelerating, based on the latest data from
CryoSat-2. Over 150 cubic km of ice is now melting into the sea each year. • NASA reports the detection of "
clay-like minerals" (specifically,
phyllosilicates), often associated with
organic materials, on the icy crust of
Europa, moon of
Jupiter. The presence of the minerals may have been the result of a collision with an
asteroid or
comet according to the scientists. • 12 December • NASA announces, based on studies with the
Hubble Space Telescope, that
water vapor plumes were detected on
Europa, moon of
Jupiter, and were similar to water vapor plumes detected on
Enceladus, moon of
Saturn. • A new drug has been shown to reduce the risk of
breast cancer in post-menopausal women by 53 percent. • Researchers have achieved a five-fold increase in the lifespan of
Caenorhabditis elegans, the equivalent of a human reaching 400–500 years of age. • 13 December – Astronomers at the
University College London report the detection of
noble molecules in
outer space for the first time.
Argon-36, in the form of
argon hydride, was found in
cosmic dust associated with the
Crab nebula supernova. • 14 December – The uncrewed Chinese
lunar rover Chang'e 3 lands on the
Moon, making China the third country to achieve a soft landing there. • 16 December – An international team of researchers reports evidence that
Neanderthals practiced
burial behavior and intentionally buried their dead. • 18 December • Scientists report, for the first time, the entire
genome of a
Neanderthal, an extinct species of
humans. The genome was extracted from the
toe bone of a 130,000-year-old Neanderthal found in a Siberian cave. • Astronomers have spotted what appears to be the first known "
exomoon", located 1,800 light years away. • 19 December • The
European Space Agency's
Gaia space telescope is launched. • 20 December • NASA reports that the
Curiosity rover has successfully upgraded, for the third time since
landing, its software programs and is now operating with version 11. The new software is expected to provide the rover with better
robotic arm and
autonomous driving abilities. Due to wheel wear, a concern to drive more carefully, over the rough terrain the rover is currently traveling on its way to
Mount Sharp, was also reported. • French Professor
Alain Carpentier has developed the first self-regulating
artificial heart, using
biomaterials and electronic sensors. The device was successfully implanted by a team at the
Georges Pompidou European Hospital in Paris. • 22 December • A massive underground reservoir of meltwater has been discovered below
Greenland, storing liquid water all year round and covering 27,000 square miles. This has implications for
sea level rises. •
Solar activity is not a key cause of recent climate change, a new study shows. • 30 December –
Earth's crust was unstable during the
Archean era and would have "dripped" down into the
mantle, which was much hotter than today, according to new research. • 31 December – NASA reports that
clouds may have been detected in the
atmospheres of several
exoplanets; specifically,
GJ 436 b and
GJ 1214 b. Earlier, on 31 September, clouds were reported found, for the first time on an exoplanet, on
Kepler-7b. ==Awards==