2010 in science

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2010 in science

The year 2010 involved numerous significant scientific events and discoveries, some of which are listed below. The United Nations declared 2010 the International Year of Biodiversity.[1]

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8 July 2010: the Solar Impulse (picturedhola ) becomes the first aircraft to complete a non-stop 24-hour flight using only solar power.

Events, discoveries and inventions

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3 January 2010: British scientists create working artificial arteries (artery cross-section pictured).

January

February

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15 February 2010: scientists state that the 1969 Murchison meteorite (fragment pictured) contained a large number of organic compounds.

March

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1 March 2010: NASA confirms the presence of large quantities of water ice on the north pole of the Moon.

April

May

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20 May 2010: scientists led by Craig Venter (pictured) create a living cell with an entirely artificial genome.

June

July

August

September

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14 September 2010: Honda's FCX Clarity (pictured), the world's first production-line hydrogen car, arrives in the United Kingdom.

October

November

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17 November 2010: scientists at CERN (pictured) trap neutral antimatter atoms for the first time.

December

Prizes

Abel Prize

Fields Medal

Nobel Prize

Deaths

January

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15 January 2010: Marshall Warren Nirenberg, a Nobel Prize-winning American biochemist, dies aged 82.

February

March

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22 March 2010: Ky Fan, a Chinese-American mathematician and theorist, dies aged 95.

April

May

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3 June 2010: Vladimir Arnold, a Russian mathematician, dies aged 72.

June

July

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14 October 2010: Benoît Mandelbrot, a French-American mathematician, dies aged 85.

September

October

See also

References

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