Each year, science advances at an astonishing rate and what was once the realm of science fiction becomes science fact. For most of us, these discoveries and innovations flutter by as little more than curiosities, fascinating headlines in the news, but each of these has significant implications that have the potential to reshape our world over the next decade or so.

Have you ever seen so many guys with grey hair go off like that? Celebrations at the Higgs Boson announcement. Picture: AFP

Here’s a list of some of the top scientific discoveries and innovations for 2012.

15. Voyager leaves the solar system

In 1977, the original Star Wars was produced using miniature models for special effects. Star Wars contains a few embarrassingly archaic shots of computer graphics from that era; chunky yellow/green lines plastered on a black screen highlight just how far computing has come in the last 35 years.

At the same time Star Wars hit the silver screen, NASA launched two Voyager spacecraft on a grand tour of the solar system, providing humanity with its first fleeting glimpse of the gas giants up close. Voyager represents the most audacious expedition in the history of exploration, pushing the then known-technology to its very limits.

Over the next decade, the two Voyager spacecraft flew by Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus and Pluto. In 2012, some thirty five years after it left Earth, Voyager I finally reached the heliosheath, the boundary where particles streaming out from the sun are pushed back by interstellar space. If we equated interstellar space to the sea, then Voyager just crossed the river mouth, crossing the bar as it were into open ocean.

When you consider that for the past 35 years Voyager has been moving at 38,500 mph (over 60,000 kph or more than 16 kilometers a second) you get a sense of just how vast our solar system is, and we orbit just one star among an estimated two hundred billion in the Milky Way galaxy.

14. Curiosity lands on Mars

Early this year, NASA described the landing of Curiosity as seven minutes of terror, and they weren’t kidding. If Voyager is the most audacious exploration ever undertaken, Curiosity is the most audacious and complex planetary landing ever attempted. Make no mistake about it, hurtling almost four tons of scientific equipment at Mars is like hitting a golfball from Perth to Sydney and hitting a specific, predefined window on the Opera House.

Slowing that golfball from over 13,000 mph (20,000 kph) to a walking pace in just seven minutes is extraordinary. It’s akin to ensuring that golfball lands gently on the window ledge rather than the breaking glass.

13. Artificial leaf generates hydrogen

Problems like climate change aren’t going to be solved by conventional means. Using relatively inexpensive materials, Nocera has developed the world’s first practical artificial leaf. It’s early days, but drop his “leaf” in a jar of water, leave it in the sunlight, and you’ll gather hydrogen and oxygen as byproducts.

12. Flexible, inexpensive solar-panels challenge fossil fuels

Using an ion-cannon to produce cheap solar-panels definitely sounds like something out of a science fiction movie, but that’s exactly what a US start-up has done. With wafers as thin as 3mm, there’s an astounding array of possibilities for innovation with these new solar panels. There’s also the chance for solar power to make significant in-roads as an alternative to fossil fuels.

11. Ultra-flexible “willow” glass allows for curved electronics

US manufacturing company Corning, who developed the super-tough, lightweight Gorilla Glass found in smartphones, have developed Willow Glass, a flexible glass 0.05mm in thickness that, along with advances in batteries and the use of graphene in electronics, could trigger yet another transformation in computing. Several years ago, Sony showcased a purely theoretical concept called the wearable personal computer. Imagine your smartphone as a bracelet and you’ll get what they were proposing.

10. Planet with four suns

As fascinating as this discovery is, you’re probably wondering why it’s rated as high as it is, and it’s not because of the discovery itself, as remarkable as that is, it is how this astonishing planet was discovered that’s really important. This surprising discovery was made by some average Joes participating in citizen science. Citizen science is an emerging field, allowing everyday people to contribute to genuine scientific research efforts.

Getting back to our planet orbiting four suns, this remarkable planet is about the size of Neptune and has a stable orbit around a binary star system (two stars that closely orbit each other), only these stars in turn orbit another binary star system. Why this planet has not been torn apart, sucked into one of the stars or spun off into space is something scientists are now examining.

9. DARPA “terminator” traverses obstacle course with ease

Arnold said he’d be back, and he wasn’t kidding. Thanks to US military research, Skynet is alive and well and getting ready to come to a battlefield near you. DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, has developed a robot that can negotiate obstacles such as a low wall and holes in the ground, using autonomous navigation. Teaching robots to independently navigate a battlefield brings up visions of Terminator-style robots replacing front-line troops. In practice, any such innovation is at least a decade away, but it’s coming.

8. 3-D printer builds a two-story house in a single run

OK, so the house looks like something from the fictional planet Tatooine, with load-bearing arcs and curves, but it takes a quarter of the time needed to build an equivalent-sized home. And being made from sand and a chemical binder it has the durability of cement. Give it a polish and this printed house comes up looking like marble. It’s cheaper and quicker to build than a conventional home.

7. Human robotics/bionics

There have been several wonderful advancements in bionics, the use of technology to overcome physical disabilities. In England, two men have been fitted with light-sensitive microchips that replicate the neural signals for sight, giving them the ability to distinguish black from white as well as to make out the shape of various objects.

Doctors are hopeful their minds can be trained to detect more and more detail over time with their new sight. With twenty thousand people in the UK affected by blinding effects of retinitis pigmentosa, this is a significant medical advance.

In another Six Million Dollar Man bionic development, a quadriplegic woman, Jan Scheuermann, has learned to control a robotic arm and hand with her thoughts.

6. Self-driving cars are made legal in Nevada, Florida, and California

Take a good look at your kids. Depending on their age, they may never learn to drive. Earlier this year, Google began testing driverless cars and three US states have passed laws to let these cars roam free on their roads. With over 300,000 hours of autonomous driving under their belt, there’s been no accidents, at least, no robotic accidents. Ironically, the only time these driverless cars have been involved in an accident has been when humans have been at the wheel.

5. Genetically-modified silk is stronger than steel

The phrase “genetically-modified” often evokes visions of a mutant monster and the prospect of food supplies being irrevocably damaged or destroyed. The truth, however, is rather different. Humans have been genetically modifying plants and animals for tens of thousands of years using artificial selection. Simply by breeding desirable traits we’ve developed dairy cows that radically overproduce upwards of 10,000 kg of milk per year, we’ve taken wolves and created Chihuahua and Great Danes, we’ve taken wild horses and bred them to be faster and lighter, to the point where their bones become so brittle they break easily under stress. None of these animals are in a natural state, they’ve all been modified by humans. And don’t get me started on chickens.

There is a need to regulate genetically-modified plants and animals, but GM is not Pandora’s box, no more so than artificial selection ever was. When used in a scientifically robust and ethical manner, GM has tremendous potential to improve the quality of our lives.

4. Stem cells could extend life

Mice normally live to about two years of age. Scientists at the Institute for Regenerative Medicine in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, studied mice with a genetic defect that caused them to ageing rapidly and die after 21 days. Using muscle stem cells from young, healthy mice, they were able to extend the life of these defective mice for over 70 days.
At first, researchers thought there was a mistake. Perhaps the samples had been mixed up, but carefully controlled analysis showed they really had extended the lives of these genetically defective mice by a factor of three. If the same results were replicated with humans an eighty year old could reach two hundred years of age.

Stem cell therapy is still in its infancy, and this research was only conducted on muscle stem cells. There’s a long way to go before this could become a medical treatment, but the possibility of using proteins to tease the body’s own stem cells into regenerative behaviour is no longer science fiction.

3. Chimera monkeys created from multiple embryos

Like something from a Frankenstein movie, scientists have combined cells from six distinctly different different embryos into three baby monkeys, such a hybrid creature is known as a chimera. According to researchers, “The cells never fuse, but they stay together and work together to form tissues and organs… Assumptions about the way human embryos develop have always been based on the (chimera) mouse, but that’s a dangerous assumption (because humans are so different).”

Animals formed as chimeras are used to better understand the role of genes in embryonic development, but previously this study had been limited to mice. Having primate models will increase the possibility of applying any learning about their genetic development to humans.

2. DNA was photographed for the first time

In 1953 James Watson and Francis Crick first identified DNA as a complex, helical molecule, recognizing its role in carrying the genetic blueprint for life. Although x-ray diffraction revealed the now familiar double-helix shape, it would be almost sixty years before a single strand of DNA could be photographed.

There’s still more work to be done, but this level of visibility into the working of DNA has significant implications for areas like cancer research, disease prevention, treating genetic defects, etc.

1. The Higgs-Boson particle was discovered

The Standard Model of particle physics is an oddity. It’s not widely loved, but since its inception in the 1960s the Standard Model has been highly successful at combining and explaining the fundamental forces of nature. With the exception of gravity, the Standard Model has provided a robust explanation of the quantum world upon which the universe is founded.

All other particles described by the Standard Model have been seen in experiments, but the Higgs boson, first predicted in the 1960s, had never been seen until 2012. In the jigsaw puzzle that is particle physics, the Higgs field provides all other particles with their mass, so finding the Higgs and confirming its role in particle physics is an outstanding achievement.

Although this discovery may seem somewhat esoteric, this new knowledge will have an impact on our world. A hundred years ago, cars looked like jalopies, biplanes struggled to get into the air, the average life expectancy for a man was around 47 and the leading cause of death was tuberculous. A hundred years ago, we thought there was just one galaxy, ours, now we know there are hundreds of billions of stars in hundreds of billions of galaxies spread throughout the universe. A hundred years ago, the prospect of standing on the Moon or flying by Jupiter and Saturn would have seemed fanciful, like wishing on fairies, but advances in scientific knowledge have made all this possible and have radically changed our world. Imagine where humanity will be a hundred years from now.

Let’s see what 2013 has in store for us…

Comments on this post will close at 6pm AEDT.

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23 comments

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    • acotrel says:

      05:38am | 01/01/13

      ‘Each year, science advances at an astonishing rate and what was once the realm of science fiction becomes science fact. ‘

      You obviously don’t live in Australia, we don’t do that stuff any more . Which Australian private company has ever gained an award for doing cutting edge R&D ?

    • bleD says:

      07:45am | 01/01/13

      Another piece of nonsense from Acotrel. The ATLAS detector for the Higgs boson was built with important input from Australian scientists.

    • JWH says:

      08:37am | 01/01/13

      Acotrel WE live in Australia as long as we win at the Cricket and win a few medals at the Olympics get to drink beer and make sure no darkies arrive on a boat this sciencey type stuff dont matter hur hur hur

    • Mik says:

      10:04am | 01/01/13

      Australian researchers here and overseas continue to make their mark. Indeed it is amazing to find where they pop up.
      We certainly have the brains but could do with better infrastructure and more incentives to bring international contracts in.More money will always be appreciated

    • iansand says:

      10:24am | 01/01/13

      Acotrel is wrong about cutting edge developments in Australia.  Where Australia fails is in the exploitation of innovation.

    • Gregg says:

      10:44am | 01/01/13

      Now don’t you worry any on that Aco as Joh might have said, we’re all on the one planet, part of the greater brotherhood of humankind and there’s just so few of us downunder.

      It’s all a bit like our infrastructure costings, so great distances and so few people and therefore there’ll always be less to go around and yet we may see it fixed with another Ice Age and forced emigration from the north, plenty of lifetime TPVs I imagine and we might have to put many 3D printers to work in desert greenfield sites where there is plenty of flat space and sand.

      A lot of that science stuff is still in fairytale land and building a sand castle by printing likewise though the concept of pouring walls by layer for mass dormitories for the Ice Age influx may be comparable to pre-cast slab erecting.

      Somehow, I feel I’d still be going with pre-cast slabs, especially with the less technical problems to be expected and many hands available from the influx.
      All we’ll need as well is plenty of artificial trees that do not need watering but will extract CO2 to produce more water and oxygen than hydrogen.

      Meanwhile, now that it did not all end in 2012, maybe the next Ice Age is far enough away, we can have many more happy NYs and live some interesting projects for future generations to dabble with.

    • iansand says:

      11:09am | 01/01/13

      Actually, Gregg, you would still be living in a cave.  Why would anyone want walls and roofs when we have this perfectly acceptable hole in the side of a hill?

    • Geronimo says:

      07:50am | 01/01/13

      At one evolutionary stage it was believed no human could ever run a 4 minute mile, until Columbus proved otherwise, Conservatives believed the world was flat, many still do, it was unimaginable for a man made machine heavier than air to defy gravity but contrary to the political belief of The Abbott’s True Believers, without a scientific input, nothing would fly.

    • Linda says:

      08:22am | 01/01/13

      Happy New Year Acotrel. Your statement above seems to contradict all your recent crap in The Punch about Australia selling only top end high quality products to Asia. What happened over the festive season? Did you drink too much?

    • curious says:

      09:13am | 01/01/13

      On another note, why do we keep getting the message
      “Disallowed Key Characters”
      when trying to access the punch front page?

    • Geronimo says:

      10:27am | 01/01/13

      Until your Smoke Signal confirmed he was not the sole sufferer, this solitary Brave was curious too Curious!

    • stephen says:

      10:49am | 01/01/13

      Blame science mate ... which is what we should be doing when these headlines roll up again, probably in America ... ‘Gunman shoots (so many) again at a school, them himself’ ....

      The sooner people realize that gunpowder - science, again - should take the blame, then authorities would understand that withholding the science from irresponsible people is the best solution.

      Science also made cars - car crashes.
      Science also made nerve gas - Saddam’s war.
      Science also made the TV set - anything with Bert Newton in it ...
      And I also nearly said the iron, too - domestic violence, (that’s the 9 iron as well as the clothes one), but I think you get my drift : Science can be to blame for our ills as well as the idiot who handles it, and must shoulder the burden of our decay as much as any willful destructions by out of control wives ... and husbands, I gotta admit.

      Science gets it wrong, mostly.

    • sunny says:

      10:58am | 01/01/13

      That message means your browser is not compatible with the Higgs boson field.

      On another note..

      “we’ve taken wolves and created Chihuahua and Great Danes”

      is Chihuahua also the plural of Chihuahua? I would have thought it would be Chihuahi.

    • Gregg says:

      11:12am | 01/01/13

      @sunny,
      I suspect someone left a ” the ” out or an ” s ” off the end, it being chihuahuas and seemingly new technology has still not made humans infallible.

      I have had that disallowed key stroke message come up too, a real pain when you have submitted something and not done a copy first.
      Maybe it is to do with system overload, either Punch ports or overload on internet access, especially if using wireless for it seems to happen at times for me when there is a bit of a slow down with connections/page changes etc.

    • sunny says:

      01:09pm | 01/01/13

      Gregg - “chihuahuas” - no worries ..although I’m slightly disappointed because it would have been cool to sing “Oh give me a home, where the chihuahua roam, and the deer and the antelope play..”

    • expat says:

      10:24am | 01/01/13

      The most effective catalyst for scientific development is war. Civilisation made more scientific progress in a decade of war than they would have in a century of peace.

      Australia cannot even build basic infrastructure for a reasonable cost and within a realistic time frame, dont even bother with scientific development locally.
      China has just launched their GPS system and they will be on the moon within the decade if not less. If you want to see where the scientific development will come from, China is the key.

    • sunny says:

      11:14am | 01/01/13

      expat - war accelerated a lot of already existing technologies as well. Penicillin was discovered in the late 1920’s but was going nowhere in terms of mass production, then WWII happened forcing the government to bring together all the individuals working on it to collaborate and find a solution quick smart.

    • stephen says:

      01:39pm | 01/01/13

      China’s scientific development came, and still comes, from America.
      What China invented was industrial espionage on a grand scale.

    • Bear says:

      02:16pm | 01/01/13

      And the space race was only possible by stealing Nazi scientists.

    • gobsmack says:

      10:25am | 01/01/13

      “A hundred years ago, the prospect of standing on the Moon .... would have seemed fanciful”

      But it happened 56 years later.  It’s been almost 40 years since the last moon landing and it seems that it won’t happen again soon.

      “A hundred years ago, cars looked like jalopies..”

      Maybe, but like todays models, they were propelled by fossil fuel powered internal combustion engines.

      The only real advances in the last 50 years has been in computing and telecommunications.  The age of the Jetsons is still some way off.

    • sunny says:

      01:28pm | 01/01/13

      “It’s been almost 40 years since the last moon landing and it seems that it won’t happen again soon.”

      I don’t understand why they can’t at least send up an unmanned ‘Moon Rover’ similar to the Mars Rover (they’ll save a lot of money not having to buy Tang). Get it to zoom around to the dark side every so often and see what kind of critters and stuff inhabit the craters. They’ve probably got the technology to bring an unmanned module back from the moon with samples as well.

    • kitteh says:

      02:02pm | 01/01/13

      Nice article. For all my despair over the lack of respect (and funding) for science research in Australia, it still thrills me to see what can be accomplished. The advances in bionics are particularly amazing - and are already changing lives.

    • Bruce Mullinger says:

      04:10pm | 01/01/13

      Despite the incredible discoveries in space as far as we know planet Earth is the only planet nurturing and sustaining life. If,as we presume, we are intelligent life why then are plundering the planet to death to appease economists and greedmongers and their foolish obsession with perpetual economic growth?
      The miracle of life is only possible on this amazing planet - destroy the planet and you destroy life and human existence may never be known thus rendering our very being totally meaningless.
      The world is in dire need of some wholesome leadership to denounce the folly of growth, for the creation of wealth is absolutely insignificant compared to the creation and continuation of life.

 

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