Science in 2012: Scientists aim at moon and beyond
Top Stories
- UPA II report card: Govt flaunts stricter rape law, remains silent on graft
- CSK team principal: Avid golfer, fast car lover, married to cricket
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Top Lashkar militant Hilal Molvi killed in Kashmir encounter
- Sanjay Dutt's life at Yerwada begins as prisoner number 16656

Indian scientists burrowed the forest beds in the northeast to discover a new family of vertebrates, built a satellite that can peer through clouds and dark nights, and grappled to commission the first large nuclear power plant at Kudankulam in 2012.
Indian science also aimed beyond the moon, a frontier they conquered in 2008, with their eyes set on exploring Mars hoping to soon join the select group of nations who have launched scientific missions to study the red planet.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, in his Independence Day address, announced that India would launch a space mission to Mars in 2013.
However, there were some low points as four leading scientists, including former ISRO chairman G Madhavan Nair were barred by the government from holding any official posts for their alleged role in the controversial deal between Antrix Corporation and Devas Multimedia Ltd for S-band space segment, which was annulled.
The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) got a shot in the arm with its clot-buster drug developed by its constituent lab Institute of Microbial Technology got the permission for clinical trials. The drug is an advanced version of streptokinase.
Another CSIR institute, Central Drug Research Laboratory signed an agreement with a US-based company for pre-clinical and clinical development of an oral medicine for rapid fracture healing.
Scientists in India joined the celebrations when CERN researchers announced in July they had found what appeared to be the elusive Higgs Boson that gives mass to matter.
Scientists from an assortment of Indian institutes played a key role in decoding the data generated by collisions of protons in the 27-km Large Hadron Collider on the Franco-Swiss border, a facility which they had also helped develop. The Indo-Russian team of scientists, working at the Kudankulam Nuclear Power Project, were faced with a challenge as they struggled to commission its first 1,000 MW unit.
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Paddy shortfall blamed for mystery death of procurement officer
- 'Bookie' Vindoo was close to BCCI chief's son-in-law: cops
- Net widens, police watching three more players, new set of bookies
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Malegaon 2006 case: NIA names four right wing terror suspects
- BJP invokes 'sarcasm, ridicule' against PM
- Nine years on, Sonia, PM put up show of unity, Singh hints at unfinished business


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