It's more or less traditional for magazines and tv shows to do some sort of year-end wrap-up. As this blog is now hosted by a magazine, I suppose I ought to follow suit. Of course, compiling "Year's Best" lists is a highly subjective business, requiring a lot of information gathering, so I'll throw this open to my readers before compiling my own highly biased list.
So, a call for nominations:
In your opinion, what is the most important, influential, or exciting development in astronomy in 2006?
This could be a new observation, a new type of observation technique, or it could be an exciting new theoretical development. There will be a separate post for nominating the physics result of the year, so try to restrict this to astronomy. Post your nomination (or nominations-- I'm not going to limit the number of submissions) in the comments, ideally with some sort of citation (refereed journal articles would be best, though I'll take ArXiV links or popular-press stories), and some short statement of why this is an important result.
I'll compile a list of nominations, and if we get enough good ones, I'll have a vote, like for the Top Eleven. If we don't get enough good nominations, I'll just post my own biased list.
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The Bullet Cluster weak lensing dark matter result, hands down.
Here are some links on it:
My self-serving link to my own blog.
Slides from a talk I gave to the astro journal club at Vanderbilt shortly after the results were announced
Cosmic Variance musings by Sean Carroll
Some guy named Chad Orzel said a thing or two
Chandra press release
And last, but most definitely not least,
The ADS entry for the ApJL paper
I'll agree with the Bullet Cluster for #1, but the discovery of OGLE-05-169L b was also pretty cool.
Yeah, the Bullet Cluster results are pretty big.
OGLE-05-169L_b is another good one.
I think the WMAP 3-year results would be another one, though they aren't quite at the level of the first two nominees, or of the WMAP 1-year release.
I second the Bullet cluster & WMAP 3-year. In my opinion also very important: Chandra's confirmation of the Hubble constant.
And since today: Liquid water on Mars!
Make that 5 votes for the Bullet Cluster.