2023 in science


The following scientific events occurred in 2023.

Events

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

  • *Amid an ongoing boom in artificial intelligence, the UK hosts the world's first international summit devoted to safely managing the technology.
  • *Computer simulations reveal that remnants of a protoplanet named Theia could be inside the Earth, left over from a giant collision in ancient times, which afterwards formed the Moon.
  • *Dinkinesh, previously thought to be a single asteroid, is revealed by NASA's Lucy probe to in fact be a binary pair.
  • – A new record high efficiency of 33.9% is reported for a silicon-perovskite tandem solar cell. This also surpasses the Shockley-Quieser theoretical limit of 33.7% of single junction solar cells for the first time.
  • – Scientists release the first connectome of neuropeptide signaling in an animal nervous system. On 1 November, a functional atlas of signal propagation in 23,433 pairs of neurons across the worm's head by direct optogenetic activation is published. On 17 November, the development of fluorescent neuropeptide sensors is reported.
  • – A study finds that "catastrophic ecosystem collapse" of UK forests is likely within the next 50 years, due to a wide range of factors.
  • – In 10 studies, researchers of the report yeast with a half-synthetic genome.
  • – Surgeons report the first human eye transplant; the patient did not regain sight in the transplanted eye.
  • – A new scalable technique for carbon nanotube-based MOSFETs is demonstrated.
  • *White faces generated by artificial intelligence are perceived as more real than actual human faces while the same is not true for people of colour in a study.
  • *A study proposes characteristics of human evolution underlie current global environmental problems, favoring groups of increased size and group-level cultural traits of greater environmental exploitation. Based on the hypothesis that the primary mechanism of evolutionary inheritance has shifted from genes to culture, it suggests cultural evolution patterns to date work against global collective solutions to Anthropocene challenges.
  • *An umbrella review summarizes the research on benefits and risks associated with digital media use by youths, suggesting caregivers, policymakers and researchers should continue to move away from prevailing oversimplified recommendations to reduce screen time to instead focus on the types of screen use.
  • *Geologists report that Iceland may face "decades" of volcanic instability, following a series of recent eruptions on the Reykjanes Peninsula, breaking an 800-year hiatus.
  • *3D printing of hair follicles on lab-grown skin is reported.
  • *Casgevy, a world-first gene therapy that aims to cure sickle-cell disease and transfusion-dependent beta thalassemia, is approved by the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, becoming the first drug using CRISPR to be licensed.
  • *Scientists report first evidence that unfamiliar groups of nonhuman primates, particularly bonobos, are capable of cooperating with each other.
  • *The International Cryosphere Climate Initiative publishes its annual State of the Cryosphere Report. It warns of rapid, irreversible sea-level rise from Earth's ice sheets, which could potentially reach 12–20 metres in the coming centuries.
  • – The global average temperature temporarily exceeds 2 °C above the pre-industrial average for the first time in recorded history.
  • – A study of censorship in science finds it to be often driven by scientists themselves, motivated by prosocial concerns or reputation protection.
  • – An autonomous excavator is demonstrated. Using sensors, the machine can generate 3D maps of a construction site, localising individual blocks and stones in order to build a wall.
  • *Astrophysicists report the detection of "Amaterasu", the second highest-energy cosmic ray ever known, second only to the Oh-My-God particle of 1991. Amaterasu originated from the Local Void and its energy exceeded 240 exa-electron volts.
  • *Researchers report the discovery of nearly 200 functionally diverse natural machineries for CRISPR gene editing.
  • - Astronomers report evidence, for the first time, of an overmassive black hole galaxy, the result of "heavy black hole seed formation from direct collapse", an alternative way of producing a black hole other than the collapse of a dead star. This discovery was found in studies of UHZ1, a very early galaxy containing a quasar, by the Chandra X-ray Observatory and James Webb Space Telescope.
  • *Astronomers report the discovery of a star, HD 110067, that contains six sub-Neptune exoplanets with radii ranging from 1.94R⊕ to 2.85R⊕.
  • *The first example of a planet-forming disk beyond the Milky Way galaxy is reported by astronomers using the ALMA in Chile. The system, designated as HH 1177, is located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, about 160,000 light years away.
  • *Researchers demonstrate multicellular microbots grown from a human cell, "anthrobots", that can move around in tissues in vitro.
  • *A trial comparing a healthy vegan and a healthy omnivorous diet in identical twins finds the former to be substantially better according to cardiometabolic measures like LDL-C after 8 weeks.
  • : an efficient electrocaloric heat pump for sustainable cooling, taste-tested bioreactor-grown cultured coffee, an autonomous laboratory for synthesis of inorganic powders, the A-Lab, a solar tower design using downdraft technology for hot and dry weather areas that could generate twice the electricity of solar updraft systems and operate at night, the Twin-Technology Solar System .
  • : phase 2-trialed Mazdutide against type-2 diabetes, phase 1-trialed lepodisiran against cardiovascular risk factor lipoprotein, rat-tested depot technology for sustained delivery of GLP-1 receptor agonists against the need for frequent injections.
  • : a study indicates common food allergies are not benign but are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality, in a commentary, scientists warn that to "reduce plastic pollution efficiently and economically, policy should prioritize regulating and reducing upstream production rather than downstream pollution cleanup" as "popularized by The Ocean Cleanup", social unconnectedness confirmed as likely substantial mortality risk factor using UK Biobank data, nanoplastic pollution and consumption identified as a likely Parkinson's disease risk factor, a review cautions "robust evidence has yet to emerge that are effective at reducing respiratory or gastrointestinal infections in real world settings", a content analysis of packaging marketing of infant and toddler foods in supermarkets suggests protection of young children's diets from harmful influence of food marketing is needed, a preprint suggests some large language models have an 'extractable memorization' flaw by which training data can be extracted at affordable costs by queries.

December