From neutrinos to new planets, a look at some of the most important scientific discoveries in 2011.
1. Upending the laws of physics
Researchers  at the CERN laboratory in Geneva announced in September that they'd  clocked subatomic particles called neutrinos moving faster than the  speed of light. That finding directly contradicts Albert Einstein's 1905  special theory of relativity, which holds that nothing can outrun  light. If neutrinos can, they could arrive at a destination before they  even left, opening the prospect of time travel. Or could it be that  neutrinos move through an undiscovered fifth dimension, separate from  the three dimensions of space and one of time that we know about? Those  ideas are so shocking that even the CERN team "wanted to find a mistake"  in their data, says team leader Antonio Ereditato. But they didn't. And  so far, further testing has failed to dismiss the finding, says  theoretical physicist Matthew Strassler, as "a doorway into something  fundamental and deep we don't know about nature."
2. Reasons to listen to your gut
Bacteria  in our intestines may play a major role in the health of our minds and  bodies. German researchers have discovered that just as each human being  has a specific blood type, each of us also has one of three separate  families of bacteria residing in our guts. A person's "enterotype"  likely establishes itself in infancy and appears to affect everything  from how well food is digested to how drugs are absorbed. The discovery  of the three distinct gut ecosystems "was a surprise, and it's good  news," says researcher Peer Bork. The finding could help physicians  diagnose and treat serious digestive disorders, and also help explain  why the effects of medicines and nutrients vary widely from person to  person. Further studies have shown that ingesting a bacteria species  found in certain yogurts and cheeses calms stressed-out mice — pointing  to the prospect of treating psychiatric disorders with microbes instead  of drugs.
3. Closing in on alien life
A  galaxy-wide search for Earth-like planets has returned a startling  number of candidates. Using NASA's Kepler space telescope, astronomers  this year announced they'd spotted 2,326 new worlds and counting. Ten of  those planets are close in size to our own and orbit their suns in the  "habitable zone," where temperatures could be balmy enough to support  liquid water — and potentially life. The best contender yet, Kepler-22b,  looks to be a hospitable 72 degrees and circles a star very similar to  our sun. The data pouring in from the spacecraft, launched in March  2009, are "game-changing," says Kepler principal investigator William  Borucki. "It's just a tremendous amount of new knowledge." Already,  other researchers are scanning the most promising Kepler finds for signs  of alien life.
4. A new weapon against aging
The  fountain of youth might one day flow within our own cells. Scientists  working with mice have discovered that if they remove a special kind of  cell that promotes aging, a host of age-related conditions disappear:  The genetically modified rodents didn't develop cataracts, their skin  didn't wrinkle, and they maintained high levels of energy throughout  their lives. The so-called senescent cells have lost the ability to  divide, and as they build up in aging tissue, they release toxins that  destroy robust neighboring cells. Scientists devised a way of killing  off those senescent cells, and the procedure "suggests therapies that  might work in real patients," says Norman E. Sharpless, an expert on  aging. If purging the cells works in people as it does in mice, the  treatment could ward off a host of age-related diseases, from cancer to  dementia, and keep us vigorous longer.
- As seen in The Week
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