Top Science Discoveries of 2019

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2019 was a big year for science since everyone has been looking back in the year and what happened we thought. why not take a look back at some of the biggest scientific discoveries of 2019.


Top Science Discoveries of 2019

NASA's nuclear-powered NewHorizons spacecraft flew past a mysterious mountain-sized object some four billion miles from Earth. the object which was renamed from Ultima Thule to Eric Hoth is the most distant object humanity has ever visited. the new horizons probe took hundreds of photographs as it flew by the space rock a more than 32,000 miles per hour revealing it to be oddly flat for a celestial body the flyby is helping to reveal new clues about the solar system's evolution and how planets like Earth formed. those scientists haven't even finished receiving all the data yet.

Top Science Discoveries

Just days after New Horizons flyby Chinas Chiang for the mission was the first to put a rover and Lander on the far side of the Moon the part we cant see from Mars before chain for success no country or Space Agency had ever touched the far side of the Moon. the rover landed in the moons the South Pole. which is the site of a cataclysmic collision that occurred around 3.9 billion years ago the celestial smash-up left a 1500 milewide impact site that likely punched all the way through the crust of the moon. by landing the spacecraft in this crater scientists hope to study some of the moons most ancient rocks elsewhere in the solar system.

Top Science Discoveries

NASA scientists learned about the existence of Marsquakes. the red planets version of earthquakes. this discovery came from NASA's Insight Lander which first touched down on Mars in November 2018 and has given scientists the unprecedented ability to detect and monitor these quakes the Landers built-in seismometer detected its first Mars quake in April and since then researchers have recorded more than a hundred seismic events about 21 of which were likely quakes they hope that by studying these quakes they learn more about what lies underneath the Martian surface and over five million miles from Earth.

Top Science Discoveries

The Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa 2 touched down on the surface of an asteroid the probe was first launched in December of 2014 but didn't land on the asteroid surface until this past year after its long journey what makes this mission special. it was the first to collect samples from another celestial body to bring back to earth by studying the asteroid's innermost rocks and debris. which have been sheltered from the wear and tear of space since the formation of the solar system scientists hope to learn how asteroids like this may have seeded Earth with key ingredients for life.

Billions of years ago and even further out scientists discovered a planet outside our solar system that could be our best bet for finding alien life. In September scientists detected water vapor on a potentially habitable planet for the first time the planet named k2 18b is a super-earth. that orbits a red dwarf star some 110 light-years away k2 18b is the only known exoplanet or planet outside our solar system with water and atmosphere and temperature that could support liquid water on its surface. that makes it the best candidate for habitability out of any planet discovered.

This was also a huge year for the study of black holes in April the event horizon telescope team published the first-ever image of a black hole the unprecedented image that set the internet abuzz shows the supermassive black hole at the center of the mass is 87 galaxies which are about 54 million light-years away from Earth and weighs more than six billion times the mass of our Sun though. the image is so much fuzzy. it showed that as predicted black holes look like dark spheres surrounding by a glowing ring of light. since black holes are well black and they destroyed space-time around them. scientists struggled for decades to capture one on camera but while that snatched all the headlines.

This was not the only black hole breakthrough this year for the first time scientists detected a black hole discovering a nearby neutron star in August. astrophysicists detected the after match of a collision between a black hole and a neutron star the super-dense remains after a star goes supernova at the end of its life. the catastrophic collision nearly a billion years ago created ripples in space-time known as gravitational waves large enough for the ground-based LIGO system to detect this was only the third event big enough for scientists to detect since gravitational waves were first discovered in 2015 after it was predicted by Einstein a hundred years prior this.

This year also saw many innovations in space travel technology in Mars SpaceX underwent the first launch of the crew dragon system a commercial spacecraft designed to put NASA astronauts into orbit the maiden flight of the crew dragon marked the first time that a commercial space ship designed for humans left earth it was also the first time in eight years that an American spaceship made for people launched into orbit crew dragon successful test. the flight was a critical milestone for u.s. since.

NASA retired its flew to space shuttles in 2011 and back here on earth scientists have made monumental the often troubling discoveries.
Kaymer researchers found that the Antarctic and Greenland ice sheets are melting at unprecedented rates in April a study revealed that the Greenland ice sheet is losing on average 286 billion tons of ice per year two decades ago the number was just 50 billion aint Jerrica meanwhile lost an average of 250 two billion tons of ice per year in the last decade for comparison in the 1980s it was only 40 billion and researchers predictions about coming sea-level rise is getting more accurate and scarier estimates to suggest the world's oceans area is 3 feet by 2100. which would affect hundreds of millions of people around the world and another landmark.

UN report revealed that between 500,000 and a million plant and animal species face extinction many within decades the report published in April estimated that 40% of amphibian species more than 1/3 of all marine mammals and reforming corals and at least 10% of insects are threatened largely as a result of human actions and they found that more than 500,000 land species already don't have enough natural habitat left to ensure their long-term survival although on the bright side one nearly long lost species emerge from the wilderness this year.

In June scientists spotted a giant squid in its deep-sea habitat off the Gulf of Mexico the giant squid which inspired the legend of the Kraken monster has only ever been caught on video one other time because they rarely leave the icy depths of their habitat more than 3,000 feet below the water and in Rocky newse anthropologists dug deep into the earth to make discoveries in 2019.

In August researchers announced they found the oldest skull ever seen from one of our human ancestors then early intact skull which belonged to the species Australopithecus Andaman Ensis is 3.8 million years old the fossil nicknamed MRD revealed that these ancient people had protruding faces with prominent foreheads and cheekbones. Mr. Dsage also suggested that these human ancestors coexisted with another species of human ancestor Australopithecus afarensis for at least a hundred thousand years. researchers also discovered the fate of the last known group of Homo erectus one of humanity's longest-lived ancestors anthropologists revealed that a population of Homo erectus from the island of Java died between 117 and 118 years ago and is the last known appearance of Homo erectus in the fossil record the individuals seem to have perished and a mysterious mass death after which their bones were swept downstream and a flood zooming in.

Physicists engineers and biologists made big breakthroughs this year - this summer researcher captured quantum entanglement on camera for the first time according to quantum mechanics two particles can be paired and separated they remain intimately and instantly connected across vast distances so one particle will affect the other no matter how far apart they are. this is quantum entanglement in the strange phenomenon raveled Albert Einstein so much that he died believing it couldn't exist and in October engineers at Google announced they'd created a quantum computer that could perform a computation in just over three minutes that would take the world's fastest supercomputer 10,000 years to achieve this achievement and quantum computing a field of study that strives to enable computers to perform exponentially faster than today's machines could be used to improve artificial intelligence or assist in the development of new drugs Google described the milestone as quantum supremacy meaning their computer did something a conventional computer could never do in.

Other news researchers at the World Health Organization garnered a big win for the fight against Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in July the w-h-o declared the virus outbreak in Africa a global health emergency but fortunately, two experimental treatments were found to dramatically boost survival rates. the two treatments were a cocktail of antibodies injected directly into the bloodstream that could save 90 percent of people infected with the Ebola virus.

Well, that's it for an action-packed recap of 2019 with the turn of the century we can only hope there are plenty more discoveries yet to come.