The year 2004 in science and technology involved some significant events.dranmo
Anthropology
Astronomy
Biology
Computing
Earth sciences
- September 28 â A long-awaited earthquake strikes Parkfield, California, the most closely monitored earthquake zone in the world. The earthquake, which had been expected to have occurred by the late 1980s, strikes at a magnitude 6.0. The network of instruments that had been installed in the region make this the most well-recorded earthquake in history.
- December 26 â Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami.
Mathematics
Paleontology
Philosophy
Physics
Technology
Space exploration
- January 2 â NASA's Stardust space probe flies by comet 81P/Wild and collects particle samples from its coma.
- January 4 â NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Mission Spirit (MER-A), the first of two Mars rovers, lands successfully on Mars in the crater Gusev (Columbia Memorial Station) at 04:35 SCET.
- January 25 â NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Mission Opportunity (MER-B), the second Mars rover, lands successfully on Mars in the Meridiani Planum at 05:05 SCET.
- March 2
- NASA report that the area where their Mars rover Opportunity touched down shows unmistakable signs of contact with water in the geological past.
- The European Space Agency's Rosetta mission launches, aiming to land on Comet ChuryumovâÂÂGerasimenko in 2014.
- March 4 â NASA's Spirit finds evidence of past contact with water in volcanic rocks on Mars.
- April 1 â The Genesis probe closes and seals its particle collection instrument, and begins to return to Earth.
- June 11 â CassiniâÂÂHuygens, the NASA/ESA mission to Saturn, makes a flyby of one of Saturn's small outer moons, Phoebe.
- June 21 â SpaceShipOne, the first civilian space ship is launched in California, reaching an altitude of , just passing the edge of space.
- July 1 â The Cassini-Huygens space probe arrives at Saturn and begins its nominal 4-year mission after successfully reaching orbit.
- August 2 â NASA successfully launches the MESSENGER probe on its 5-year trip to Mercury.
- September 8 â The Genesis spacecraft returns to Earth with captured solar wind particles, but crash-lands because of a failure to deploy any parachute.
- October 4 â SpaceShipOne wins the Ansari X Prize after reaching an altitude of over for the second time in less than five days.
- November 15 â The SMART-1 space probe reaches orbit around the Moon. It is the first European space mission to do so.
- December 25 â The Cassini probe successfully drops the Huygens probe, sending it onto a trip to land on Saturn's moon Titan.
Awards
Appointments
Deaths
- January 6 â Thomas Stockham (b. 1933), American electrical engineer and inventor.
- January 12 â Olga Ladyzhenskaya (b. 1922), Soviet mathematician.
- February 6 â Humphry Osmond (b. 1917), English-born psychiatrist.
- February 21 â John D. Hoffman (b. 1922), American nuclear chemist.
- March 15
- Bill Pickering (b. 1910), New Zealand-born head of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
- Sir John Pople (b. 1925), British Nobel Prize-winning chemist.
- April 6 â Biswa Ranjan Nag (b. 1932), Indian physicist.
- April 19 â John Maynard Smith (b. 1920), English evolutionary biologist and geneticist.
- May 27 â Mikhail Postnikov (b. 1927), Soviet mathematician, known for his work in algebraic and differential topology.
- June 8 â David Mervyn Blow (b. 1931), English biophysicist.
- July 3 â Andriyan Nikolayev (b. 1929), cosmonaut.
- July 28 â Francis Crick (b. 1916), American Nobel laureate in Physiology for discovering the double helix structure for DNA.
- August 12 â John Clark (b. 1951), English-born molecular biologist, head of the Roslin Institute and part of the team that cloned Dolly the Sheep.
- August 15 â Sune K. Bergström (b. 1916), Swedish biochemist, winner of the 1982 Nobel Prize for Medicine.
- August 31 â Fred Whipple (b. 1906), American astronomer who coined the term "dirty snowball" to explain the nature of comets.
- October 5 â Maurice Wilkins (b. 1916), New Zealand-born British Nobel laureate in Physiology for discovering the double helix structure for DNA using X-ray diffraction.
- October 19 â Lewis Urry (b. 1927), Canadian inventor of the long-lasting alkaline battery.
- October 21 â Magdalena K. P. Smith Meyer (b. 1931), South African acarologist.
- November 18 â Robert Bacher (b. 1905), American nuclear physicist and one of the leaders of the Manhattan Project, Professor and Provost of the California Institute of Technology.
- November 20 â Ancel Keys (b. 1904), American nutritionist.
- December 26 â Frank Pantridge (b. 1916), Northern Irish cardiologist.
- December 29 â Julius Axelrod, (b. 1912), American biochemist, Nobel Prize in Physiology for work with catecholamine neurotransmitters.
References
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