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December 22, 2019

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From life on Mars, a decade of discoveries

FROM finding the building blocks for life on Mars to breakthroughs in gene editing and the rise of artificial intelligence, here are six major scientific discoveries that shaped the 2010s.

Are we alone?

We don’t know whether there was ever life on Mars, but thanks to a small, six-wheeled robot, we do know the Red Planet was habitable. 

Shortly after landing on August 6, 2012, NASA’s Curiosity rover discovered rounded pebbles — new evidence that rivers flowed there billions of years ago. The proof has since multiplied, showing there was in fact a lot of water on Mars — the surface was covered in hot springs, lakes, and maybe even oceans. 

Curiosity also discovered what NASA calls the building blocks of life, complex organic molecules, in 2014. And so the hunt continues for signs that Earth-based life is not alone. Two new rovers will be launched next year — America’s Mars 2020 and Europe’s Rosalind Franklin rovers, looking for ancient microbes.

Einstein was right (again)

We had long thought of the little corner of the universe that we call home as unique, but observations made thanks to the Kepler space telescope blew apart those pretensions.

Launched in 2009, the Kepler mission helped identify more than 2,600 planets outside of our solar system, also known as exoplanets — and astronomers believe each star has a planet, meaning there are billions out there. 

Kepler’s successor TESS was launched by NASA in 2018, as we scope out the potential for extraterrestrial life. 

Expect more detailed analysis of the chemical composition of these planets’ atmospheres in the 2020s, said Tim Swindle, an astrophysicist at the University of Arizona.

We also got our first glimpse of a black hole this year thanks to the groundbreaking work of the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration. 

“What I predict is that by the end of the next decade, we will be making high-quality real-time movies of black holes that reveal not just how they look, but how they act on the cosmic stage,” Shep Doeleman, the project’s director, said.

But one event from the decade undoubtedly stood above the rest: the detection for the first time on September 14, 2015 of gravitational waves, ripples in the fabric of the universe.

The collision of two black holes 1.3 billion years earlier was so powerful it spread waves throughout the cosmos that bend space and travel at the speed of light. That morning, they finally reached the Earth.

The phenomenon had been predicted by Albert Einstein in his theory of relativity, and here was proof he was right all along.

Three Americans won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2017 for their work on the project, and there have been many more gravitational waves detected since.

Cosmologists, meanwhile, continue to debate the origin and composition of the universe. The invisible dark matter that makes up its vast majority remains one of the greatest puzzles to solve. 

“We’re dying to know what it might be,” said cosmologist James Peebles, who won this year’s Nobel Prize in Physics.  

Welcome to the CRISPR era

Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) — a family of DNA sequences — is a phrase that doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue.

“CRISPR-based gene editing stands above all the others,” William Kaelin, a 2019 Nobel Prize winner for medicine, said.

But the field of biomedicine can now be divided into two eras, one defined during the past decade: before and after CRISPR-Cas9 (or CRISPR for short), the basis for a gene editing technology.

In 2012, Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna reported they had developed the new tool that exploits the immune defense system of bacteria to edit the genes of other organisms.

It is much simpler than preceding technology, cheaper and easy to use in small labs. Charpentier and Doudna were showered in awards but the technique is also far from perfect and can create unintended mutations. 

Immunotherapy to the fore

For decades, doctors had three main weapons to fight cancer: surgery, chemotherapy drugs and radiation.

The 2010s saw the rise of a fourth, one that was long doubted: immunotherapy, or leveraging the body’s own immune system to target tumor cells.

One of the most advanced techniques is known as CAR T-cell therapy, in which a patient’s T-cells — part of their immune system — are collected from their blood, modified and reinfused into the body.

A wave of drugs have hit the market since the mid-2010s for more and more types of cancer including melanomas, lymphomas, leukemias and lung cancers — heralding what some oncologists hope could be a golden era.

For William Cance, scientific director of the American Cancer Society, the next decade could bring new immunotherapies that are “better and cheaper” than what we have now.

Meet the relatives

The decade began with a major new addition to the human family tree: Denisovans, named after the Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains of Siberia. 

Scientists sequenced the DNA of a female juvenile’s finger bone in 2010, finding it was distinct both from genetically modern humans and Neanderthals, our most famous ancient cousins who lived alongside us until around 40,000 years ago.

The mysterious hominin species is thought to have ranged from Siberia to Indonesia, but the only remains have been found in the Altai region and Tibet. We also learned that, unlike previously assumed, Homo sapiens bred extensively with Neanderthals, and our relatives were not the brutish simpletons previously assumed but were responsible for artworks, such as the handprints in a Spanish cave they were credited for crafting in 2018. They also wore jewelry, and buried their dead with flowers, just like we do.

Next came Homo naledi, remains of which were discovered in South Africa in 2015, while this year, paleontologists classified yet another species found in the Philippines: a small-sized hominin called Homo luzonensis.

Advances in DNA testing have led to a revolution in our ability to sequence genetic material tens of thousands of years old, helping unravel ancient migrations, like that of the Bronze Age herders who left the steppes 5,000 years ago, spreading Indo-European languages to Europe and Asia.

AI levels up

Machine learning, what we most commonly mean when talking about “artificial intelligence,” came into its own in the 2010s. Using statistics to identify patterns in vast datasets, machine learning today powers everything from voice assistants to recommendations on Netflix and Facebook. So-called “deep learning” takes this process even further and begins to mimic some of the complexity of a human brain.

It is the technology behind some of the most eye-catching breakthroughs of the decade: from Google’s AlphaGo, which beat the world champion of the fiendishly difficult game Go in 2017, to the advent of real-time voice translations and advanced facial recognition on Facebook. 




 

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