2011 in science


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

Events, discoveries and inventions

January

resistant to HIV.
s from mouse stem cells.
gene is successfully introduced to a population of mosquitoes.
Gliese 581d could potentially support Earth-like life.
.
erupts in Eritrea, despite having been considered extinct.
engineers develop nanowire electronics that can be attached to nearly any surface.
26 June
's Dawn spacecraft successfully enters orbit around the asteroid 4 Vesta.
, STS-135, ends with the landing of Space Shuttle Atlantis at Kennedy Space Center.
successfully kills off leukemia lymphocytes in three advanced patients.
successfully tests a new class of conventional explosive, reportedly five times more powerful than existing explosives.
publishes the design of its future heavy-lift rocket, the Space Launch System.
of the Black Death which devastated Europe in the 14th century.
, the first major airliner to significantly incorporate composite materials, completes its first commercial flight.
reaches seven billion, according to a United Nations estimate.
releases an enhanced version of its Asimo humanoid robot.
successfully launches its Mars Science Laboratory mission, which landed the Curiosity Mars rover on Mars in 2012.
, allowing it to image the motion of individual light waves.
s have devastated populations of small mammals in the Florida Everglades.

Abel Prize

January

, a Nobel Prize-winning American physicist, dies aged 89.
, the "father of cryonics", dies aged 92.
, an American technology entrepreneur and co-founder of Apple Inc., dies aged 56.