Saturday, September 20, 2025

NuSTAR Observes a Cataclysmic Variable

An artist's impression of an
intermediate polar system, in which a white dwarf is accreting matter from a companion star. Close to the white dwarf, the magnetic field disrupts the accretion disk and draws matter along the magnetic poles. Image credit: Mark Garlick (Space-art). Download Image

During the past week, NuSTAR observed IGR J19713+0747, a variable high-energy X-ray source. Optical studies show that the source has a very short orbital period of 13 minutes and that it is likely a Cataclysmic Variable (CV) of an intermediate polar (IP) type. X-ray emission from these highly magnetized white dwarf stars is thought to be powered by accretion of matter from a companion star. However, this source also has another star close by with a measured consistent proper motion. This means that the nearby star could be another companion to the CV, making the source a rare triple system. The primary goal of this NuSTAR observation is to verify if the hard X-ray source is a bona fide intermediate polar CV and measure the mass of the white dwarf. The NuSTAR hard X-ray spectrum will also look for potential effects of the tertiary star on the CV system.

Authors: Sol Bin Yun (Graduate Student, Caltech)



Friday, September 19, 2025

An Exceptional Einstein Cross Reveals Hidden Dark Matter

Detailed morphology of each of the five images of the Einstein cross, as revealed by ALMA.
Credit: P. Cox et al. - ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)

The left panel shows the galaxy HerS-3, which is gravitationally amplified in an Einstein cross with a bright fifth central image, as observed with NOEMA in the millimeter continuum (yellow contours), superimposed on the HST near-infrared image, identifying the four galaxies (G1 to G4) of the lensing galaxy group. The yellow star indicates the position of the dark matter (DM) halo associated with the group. The right panel displays the detailed morphology of each of the five images of the Einstein cross as revealed by ALMA. Credit: P. Cox et al / ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO) / NOEMA

Credit: N. Lira, Cox et al. - ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO) / NOEMA

Credit: N. Lira, Cox et al. - ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)



An international team of astronomers, including researchers from ALMA, has discovered a spectacular Einstein Cross in the distant universe that reveals the hidden presence of dark matter. Observations used data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, the Northern Extended Millimeter Array (NOEMA) in France, the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) in the USA, and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. The findings are now published in the Astrophysical Journal.

The galaxy, known as HerS-3, lies 11.6 billion light-years away and appears multiplied into five images by a massive group of galaxies located 7.8 billion light-years from Earth. This striking lensing effect, called an Einstein Cross, is scarce, and in this case, even more extraordinary because of the presence of a bright fifth image at the center of the cross.

The light from HerS-3 is bent by four massive foreground galaxies that sit at the core of a larger group containing at least ten more galaxies. However, detailed lensing models showed that the visible galaxies alone could not account for the exact arrangement of the five images.

“The only way to reproduce the remarkable configuration we observed was to add an invisible, massive component: a dark matter halo at the center of the galaxy group,” explains Pierre Cox, from the Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris and lead author of the study. “This halo weighs several trillion times the mass of our Sun.”

Dark matter makes up about 80% of all matter in the universe, but it does not emit or absorb light. Astronomers can only detect it through its gravitational effects. The HerS-3 Einstein Cross offers a unique laboratory for studying how dark matter influences the formation of galaxies in the early universe.

Because of the magnification caused by lensing, the team was able to study HerS-3 in unprecedented detail. The galaxy appears as a luminous starburst, with an inclined rotating disk and strong outflows of gas from its center. “HerS-3 formed when the universe was just two billion years old, during the peak of cosmic star formation,” says Hugo Messias, co-author of the study and astronomer at the ALMA Observatory. “Thanks to this natural telescope, we can zoom into regions 10 times smaller than the Milky Way, almost 12 billion light-years away, and in the process infer hidden matter in the light-of-sight.”

This is the first detection of an Einstein Cross at submillimeter and radio wavelengths—a milestone for facilities like ALMA that probe the cold gas and dust fueling the birth of stars in galaxies in the early universe.

Scientific Paper




Additional information

This research appears in the Astrophysical Journal as "HerS-3: An Exceptional Einstein Cross Reveals a Massive Dark Matter Halo" by P. Cox et al.

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan, and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).

ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of ALMA's construction, commissioning, and operation.



Contacts:

Nicolás Lira
Education and Public Outreach Officer
Joint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile
Phone:
+56 2 2467 6519
Cel: +56 9 9445 7726
Email: nicolas.lira@alma.cl

Jill Malusky
Public Information Officer
NRAO
Phone:
+1 304-456-2236
Email: jmalusky@nrao.edu

Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Phone:
+49 89 3200 6670
Email: press@eso.org

Yuichi Matsuda
ALMA EA-ARC Staff Member
NAOJ
Email:
yuichi.matsuda@nao.ac.jp


ALMA Captures the Birthplace of a Magnetized Protostellar Jet for the First Time

Fig.1: HH 211 Jet and Outflow Observed by JWST and ALMA. (a) The JWST composite image (in color, Ray et al. 2023) reveals the jet and outflow traced by H₂ and CO emission lines in the near-infrared. However, thick dust around the protostar blocks JWST’s view of the jet structures within about 1,000 astronomical units. (b) In contrast, ALMA’s CO image in the submillimeter band (shown in grayscale) penetrates this obscured region, clearly unveiling the jet being launched from the accretion disk (green). Credit: Lee et al.

Fig.2: HH 211 Jet and Outflow Observed by JWST and ALMA. The JWST composite image (in color, Ray et al. 2023) reveals the jet and outflow traced by H₂ and CO emission lines in the near-infrared. However, thick dust around the protostar blocks JWST’s view of the jet structures within about 1,000 astronomical units. In contrast, ALMA’s CO image in the submillimeter band (shown in grayscale) penetrates this obscured region, clearly unveiling the jet being launched from the accretion disk (green). Credit: Lee et al.



In the universe, stars and planets don’t form suddenly. Their formation resembles a lengthy construction process. Near a young star, there is often a surrounding disk of gas and dust called an accretion disk. Material in this disk keeps rotating, gathering together, and eventually falling onto the star, helping it grow over time. However, this process faces a major challenge: if the material in the accretion disk spins too quickly, it becomes hard for it to fall inward.

Astronomers have long believed that jets — streams of gas ejected at high speeds from near the star — can carry away the excess rotational energy, thereby easing the inward movement of material. However, the launching points of these jets are extremely close to the star, only tens of times closer than Earth is to the Sun, and previous observations have not been sufficient to resolve their details or clearly determine their origins.

An international research team led by Chin-Fei Lee at the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA) used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile to observe an extremely young protostar system called HH 211. This protostar is only about 35,000 years old, has just 6% of the Sun’s mass, and is located approximately 1,000 light-years away. It features a bright bipolar jet, and notably, this jet is one of the few known examples where a magnetic field has been detected, providing a rare opportunity to test models of magnetic-field–driven ejection.

The observations reveal that the jet moves at over 100 kilometers per second but rotates very slowly, with a specific angular momentum of only 4 au·km/s. Using conservation of angular momentum and energy, the team determined that the jet originates from the innermost edge of the accretion disk, just 0.02 astronomical units from the star — in excellent agreement with the theoretical X-wind model. This model explains how a magnetic field can act like a slingshot to propel gas outward, and it predicts a magnetic field strength consistent with previous measurements.

This discovery marks the first time the launch point of a magnetized jet has been identified with such high precision, directly confirming that jets are truly the “plumbers” of star formation—removing the last bits of angular momentum from the accretion disk so material can fall smoothly onto the star. In the future, these observations will not only help solve the mystery of how stars form but also enhance our understanding of the early stages of planet formation, since planets develop within these same disks.

Scientific Paper




Additional Information

This research was presented in a paper, “A magnetized protostellar jet launched from the innermost disk at the truncation radius,” by Lee et al., which appeared in Scientific Reports.

This release is adapted from the original
Science Highlight issued by the Academia Sinica Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (ASIAA) in Taiwan.

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan, and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).

ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of ALMA's construction, commissioning, and operation.



Contacts:

Nicolás Lira
Education and Public Outreach Officer
Joint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile
Phone:
+56 2 2467 6519
Cel: +56 9 9445 7726
Email: nicolas.lira@alma.cl

Dr. Mei-Yin Chou
Institute of Astrophysics and Astronomy
Academia Sinica
Phone:
+886-2-2366-5389
Email: cmy@asiaa.sinica.edu.tw


Thursday, September 18, 2025

Can Hayabusa2 touchdown? New study reveals space mission’s target asteroid is tinier and faster than thought

PR Image eso2515a
Artist’s impression of Hayabusa2 touching down on asteroid 1998 KY26

PR Image eso2515b
Size comparison between asteroids Ryugu and 1998 KY26

PR Image eso2515c
Size comparison between asteroid 1998 KY26 and the VLT



Videos

Hayabusa2’s next target is smaller and faster than we thought | ESO News
PR Video eso2515a
Hayabusa2’s next target is smaller and faster than we thought | ESO News

Animation of Hayabusa2’s touchdown on asteroid 1998 KY26
PR Video eso2515b
Animation of Hayabusa2’s touchdown on asteroid 1998 KY26

Animation comparing asteroids Ryugu and 1998 KY26
PR Video eso2515c
Animation comparing asteroids Ryugu and 1998 KY26



Astronomers have used observatories around the world, including the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT), to study the asteroid 1998 KY26, revealing it to be almost three times smaller and spinning much faster than previously thought. The asteroid is the 2031 target for Japan’s Hayabusa2 extended mission. The new observations offer key information for the mission’s operations at the asteroid, just six years out from the spacecraft’s encounter with 1998 KY26.

We found that the reality of the object is completely different from what it was previously described as,” says astronomer Toni Santana-Ros, a researcher from the University of Alicante, Spain, who led a study on 1998 KY26 published today in Nature Communications. The new observations, combined with previous radar data, have revealed that the asteroid is just 11 metres wide, meaning it could easily fit inside the dome of the VLT unit telescope used to observe it. It is also spinning about twice as fast as previously thought: “One day on this asteroid lasts only five minutes!" he says. Previous data indicated that the asteroid was around 30 metres in diameter and completed a rotation in 10 minutes or so.

"The smaller size and faster rotation now measured will make Hayabusa2’s visit even more interesting, but also even more challenging,” says co-author Olivier Hainaut, an astronomer at ESO in Germany. This is because a touchdown manoeuvre, where the spacecraft ‘kisses’ the asteroid, will be more difficult to perform than anticipated.

1998 KY26 is set to be the final target asteroid for the Japanese Aerospace eXploration Agency (JAXA)'s Hayabusa2 spacecraft. In its original mission, Hayabusa2 explored the 900-metre-diameter asteroid 162173 Ryugu in 2018, returning asteroid samples to Earth in 2020. With fuel remaining, the spacecraft was sent on an extended mission until 2031, when it’s set to encounter 1998 KY26, aiming to learn more about the smallest asteroids. This will be the first time a space mission encounters a tiny asteroid — all previous missions visited asteroids with diameters in the hundreds or even thousands of metres.

Santana-Ros and his team observed 1998 KY26 from the ground to support the preparation of the mission. Because the asteroid is very small and, hence, very faint, studying it required waiting for a close encounter with Earth and using large telescopes, like ESO’s VLT in Chile’s Atacama Desert [1]

The observations revealed that the asteroid has a bright surface and likely consists of a solid chunk of rock, which may have originated from a piece of a planet or another asteroid. However, the team could not completely rule out the possibility that the asteroid is made up of rubble piles loosely sticking together. “We have never seen a ten-metre-size asteroid in situ, so we don't really know what to expect and how it will look,” says Santana-Ros, who is also affiliated with the University of Barcelona.

The amazing story here is that we found that the size of the asteroid is comparable to the size of the spacecraft that is going to visit it! And we were able to characterise such a small object using our telescopes, which means that we can do it for other objects in the future,” says Santana-Ros. “Our methods could have an impact on the plans for future near-Earth asteroid exploration or even asteroid mining.”

Moreover, we now know we can characterise even the smallest hazardous asteroids that could impact Earth, such as the one that hit near Chelyabinsk, in Russia in 2013, which was barely larger than KY26,” concludes Hainaut.

Source: ESO/News



Notes

[1] Aside from the VLT, the telescopes used include the Gemini South Telescope, the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope, the Víctor M. Blanco Telescope and the Gran Telescopio Canarias. The first three facilities are operated by the US National Science Foundation's NOIRLab.



More information

This research was presented in a paper titled “Hayabusa2 extended mission target asteroid 1998 KY26 is smaller and rotating faster than previously known” to appear in Nature Communications (doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-63697-4).

The team is composed of T. Santana-Ros (Departamento de Física, Ingeniería de Sistemas y Teoría de la Señal, Universidad de Alicante, and Institut de Ciències del Cosmos (ICCUB), Universitat de Barcelona (IEEC-UB), Spain), P. Bartczak (Instituto Universitario de Física Aplicada a las Ciencias y a las Tecnologías, Universidad de Alicante, Spain and Astronomical Observatory Institute, Faculty of Physics and Astronomy, A. Mickiewicz University, Poland [AOI AMU]), K. Muinonen (Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, Finland [Physics UH]), A. Rożek (Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh, Royal Observatory Edinburgh, UK [IfA UoE]), T. Müller (Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Germany), M. Hirabayashi (Georgia Institute of Technology, United States), D. Farnocchia (Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, USA [JPL]), D. Oszkiewicz (AOI AMU), M. Micheli (ESA ESRIN / PDO / NEO Coordination Centre, Italy), R. E. Cannon (IfA UoE), M. Brozovic (JPL), O. Hainaut (European Southern Observatory, Germany), A. K. Virkki [Physics UH], L. A. M. Benner (JPL), A. Cabrera-Lavers (GRANTECAN and Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias, Spain), C. E. Martínez-Vázquez (International Gemini Observatory/NSF NOIRLab, USA), K. Vivas (Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory/NSF NOIRLab, Chile).

The European Southern Observatory (ESO) enables scientists worldwide to discover the secrets of the Universe for the benefit of all. We design, build and operate world-class observatories on the ground — which astronomers use to tackle exciting questions and spread the fascination of astronomy — and promote international collaboration for astronomy. Established as an intergovernmental organisation in 1962, today ESO is supported by 16 Member States (Austria, Belgium, Czechia, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom), along with the host state of Chile and with Australia as a Strategic Partner. ESO’s headquarters and its visitor centre and planetarium, the ESO Supernova, are located close to Munich in Germany, while the Chilean Atacama Desert, a marvellous place with unique conditions to observe the sky, hosts our telescopes. ESO operates three observing sites: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope and its Very Large Telescope Interferometer, as well as survey telescopes such as VISTA. Also at Paranal ESO will host and operate the Cherenkov Telescope Array South, the world’s largest and most sensitive gamma-ray observatory. Together with international partners, ESO operates ALMA on Chajnantor, a facility that observes the skies in the millimetre and submillimetre range. At Cerro Armazones, near Paranal, we are building “the world’s biggest eye on the sky” — ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope. From our offices in Santiago, Chile we support our operations in the country and engage with Chilean partners and society.



Links


Contacts:

Toni Santana-Ros
Planetary Scientist, University of Alicante and University of Barcelona
Alicante and Barcelona (Catalonia), Spain
Tel: +34 965903400 Ext: 2645 / 600948703
Email:
tsantanaros@icc.ub.edu

Olivier Hainaut
ESO Astronomer
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6754
Cell: +49 151 2262 0554
Email:
ohainaut@eso.org

Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Tel: +49 89 3200 6670
Cell: +49 151 241 664 00
Email:
press@eso.org


Wednesday, September 17, 2025

The smouldering heart of a celestial cigar

A close-in view of the centre of galaxy M82. Bright, bluish light radiating from the centre is due to stars actively forming there. A thick lane of gas, black in the centre and red around the edges, crosses the centre and blocks much of the light. Thinner strands and clumps of reddish dust cover much of the rest of the view. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, W. D. Vacca

What lurks behind the dense, dusty clouds of this galactic neighbour? There lies the star-powered heart of the galaxy Messier 82 (M82), also known as the Cigar Galaxy. Located just 12 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major (The Great Bear), the Cigar Galaxy is considered a nearby galaxy. As this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope Picture of the Week shows in great detail, it’s home to brilliant stars whose light is shaded by sculptural clouds, clumps and streaks of dust and gas.

It’s no surprise that the Cigar Galaxy is so packed with stars, obscured though they might be by the distinctive clouds pictured here. Forming stars 10 times faster than the Milky Way, the Cigar Galaxy is what astronomers call a starburst galaxy. The intense starburst period that grips this galaxy has given rise to super star clusters in the galaxy’s heart. Each of these super star clusters contains hundreds of thousands of stars and is more luminous than a typical star cluster. Researchers used Hubble to home in on these massive clusters and reveal how they form and evolve.

Hubble’s views of the Cigar Galaxy have been featured before, both as a previous Picture of the Week in 2012 and as an image released in celebration of Hubble’s 16th birthday. The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has also turned toward the Cigar Galaxy, producing infrared images in 2024 and earlier this year.

This image features something not seen in previously released Hubble images of the galaxy: data from the High Resolution Channel of the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The High Resolution Channel is one of three sub-instruments of ACS, which was installed in 2002. In five years of operation, the High Resolution Channel returned fantastically detailed observations of crowded, starry environments like the centres of starburst galaxies. An electronics fault in 2007 unfortunately left the High Resolution Channel disabled.

Links


Tuesday, September 16, 2025

“Black Hole Stars” could solve JWST riddle of overly massive early galaxies

Artist’s impression of a black hole star (not to scale). The cut-out reveals the central black hole with it surrounding accretion disk. What makes this a black hole star is the surrounding envelope of turbulent gas. This configuration can explain what astronomers observe in the object they are calling “The Cliff.” © MPIA/HdA/T. Müller/A. de Graaff



A newly discovered distant object that astronomers have dubbed “The Cliff” could solve a riddle posed by some of the first observations of the distant universe with the James Webb Space Telescope, related to the discovery of a population of objects dubbed “little red dots.” Those objects were thought to be young galaxies, but with such considerable mass as would have been difficult to explain in current models of cosmic evolution. “The Cliff” has led to a proposal that could resolve this problem: Little red dots are not galaxies, but instead supermassive black holes that are embedded in a thick envelope of gas. The researchers call this new class of object a “black hole star.”

n the summer of 2022, less than a full month after the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) had begun to produce its first scientific images, astronomers noticed something unexpected: little red dots. In pictures taken at JWST’s unprecedented sensitivity, these extremely compact, very red celestial objects showed very clearly in the sky, and there appeared to be a considerable number of them. JWST had apparently discovered a whole new population of astronomical objects, which had eluded the Hubble Space Telescope. That latter part is unsurprising. “Very red” is astronomy lingo for objects that emit light predominantly at longer wavelengths. The little red dots emit light predominantly at wavelengths beyond a 10 millionth of a meter, in the mid-infrared. Hubble cannot observe at wavelengths this long. JWST, on the other hand, is designed to cover this range.

Additional data showed that these objects were far away indeed. Even the closest examples were so far away that their light had taken 12 billion years to reach us. Astronomers always look into the past, and we see an object whose light takes 12 billion years to reach us as it was those 12 billion years ago, a mere 1.8 billion years after the Big Bang.

Unexplainable young, massive galaxies?

This is where things get dicey. In order to interpret astronomical observations, you need a model of the object in question. When astronomers point to their data and say, “This is a star,” the statement comes with a lot of baggage. It is trustworthy only because astronomers have robust physical models of what a star is – in short, a giant plasma ball held together by its own gravity, producing energy by nuclear fusion in its centre. You also need a good understanding of how stars look, both in images and in the rainbow-like decomposition of light known as a spectrum. In turn, if you see an object with the right kind of appearance and the right kind of spectrum, you can confidently state that it is a star.

The little red dots did not seem to fit into any of the usual slots, so astronomers set out to look beyond the standard objects. One of the first interpretations offered was a bombshell in and of itself: In this interpretation, little red dots were galaxies that were extremely rich in stars, their light reddened by huge amounts of surrounding dust. Within our own cosmic neighborhood, if you put our solar system in a cube one light-year a side, that cube would only contain a single star: our Sun. In the star-rich galaxies postulated to explain little red dots, a cube that size would contain several hundred thousand stars.

In our home galaxy, the Milky Way, the only region that dense in stars is the central nucleus, but that contains only about one thousandth of the stars needed in those little-red-dot models. The sheer number of stars involved, as high as hundreds of billions of solar masses’ worth less than a billion years after the Big Bang, raised major questions about astronomers’ basic understanding of galaxy evolution: Could we even explain how these galaxies produced so many stars, so quickly? Co-author Bingjie Wang (Penn State University) explains: “The night sky of such a galaxy would be dazzlingly bright. If this interpretation holds, it implies that stars formed through extraordinary processes which have never been observed before.”

Galaxies vs. active galactic nuclei

The interpretation itself remained controversial. The community split into two camps: One group that favored the many-stars-plus-dust interpretation, and another that interpreted little red dots as active galactic nuclei, but also obscured by copious dust. Active galactic nuclei are what we see when a steady stream of matter falls onto a galaxy’s central black hole, forming an exceedingly hot, so-called accretion disk around the central object. But this second interpretation came with its own set of limitations. There are marked differences between the spectra of little red dots and those of the dust-reddened active galactic nuclei astronomers had previously observed. In addition, this interpretation would require extremely large masses for the supermassive black holes at the center of those objects – and surprisingly many of those, given the large number of little red dots that had been found.

There was a consensus, too: that in order to resolve the puzzle, astronomers would need more and different observational data. The original JWST observations had provided images. For testing physical interpretations, astronomers need spectra: detailed information about how much light an object emits at different wavelengths. For the top telescopes, there is considerable competition for observing time. Once it became clear just how interesting little red dots were, numerous astronomers world-wide began to apply for time to observe them more closely. One such application was the RUBIES program formulated by Anna de Graaff at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg and an international team of colleagues, where the acronym stands for “Red Unknowns: Bright Infrared Extragalactic Survey.”

The distant treasures of RUBIES

The RUBIES application was successful, and between January and December 2024, the astronomers used nearly 60 hours of JWST time to obtain spectra from a total of 4500 distant galaxies, one of the largest spectroscopic data sets obtained with JWST to date. As Raphael Hviding (MPIA) says: “In that data set, we found 35 little red dots. Most of them had already been found using publicly available JWST images. But the ones that were new turned out to be the most extreme and fascinating objects.” Most interesting of all was the spectrum for an object the astronomers found in July 2024. The astronomers dubbed the object in question “The Cliff,” and it seemed to be an extreme version of the population of little red dots – and by that very fact a promising test case for interpretations of just what little red dots were. The Cliff is so distant from us that its light took 11.9 billion years to reach us (redshift z=3.55).

A curious similarity to single stars

With this unmissable, unusual feature, The Cliff looked like it did not fit any of the interpretations that had been proposed for little red dots. But De Graaff and her colleagues wanted to make sure. They constructed diverse variations of all the models that tried to cast little red dots either as massive star-forming galaxies or as dust-shrouded active galactic nuclei, attempted to reproduce the spectrum of The Cliff with each one, and failed every single time.

Anna de Graaff says: “The extreme properties of The Cliff forced us to go back to the drawing board, and come up with entirely new models.“ By that time, the idea that Balmer-break features in a spectrum might be due to something other than stars had entered the discussion (in the shape of a September 2024 article by two researchers based in China and the UK). De Graaff and her colleagues had started to wonder about something very similar themselves: Balmer breaks can be found both in the spectra of single, very hot, young stars and in the spectra of galaxies containing a sufficient number of such very hot, young stars. Weirdly, The Cliff looked more like the spectrum of a single star than that of a whole galaxy.

Enter black hole stars

On this basis, de Graaff and her colleagues developed a model some of them have taken to calling a “black hole star,” written as BH*: An active galactic nucleus, that is, a supermassive black hole with an accretion disk, but surrounded and reddened not by dust, but by virtue of being embedded in a thick envelope of hydrogen gas. The BH* is not a star in the strict sense, since there is no nuclear fusion reactor in its center. In addition, the gas in the envelope is swirling much more violently (there is much stronger turbulence) than in any ordinary stellar atmosphere. But the basic physics is similar: The active galactic nucleus heats the surrounding gas envelope, just like the nuclear-fusion-driven center of a star heats the star’s outer layers, so the external appearance has marked similarities.

The models formulated by de Graaff and colleagues at this point are proofs-of-concept – pioneering work, but not by any measure a perfect fit. Still, these black hole star models describe the data much better than any other type of model. In particular, the shape of the name-giving cliff in the spectrum is nicely explained by assuming a turbulent, dense, spherical gas envelope around an AGN. From that perspective, The Cliff would be an extreme example where the central black hole star dominates the object’s brightness. For the other little red dots, their light would be a more even mixture of the central black hole star with the light from stars and gas in the surrounding parts of the galaxy.

A new mechanism for rapid early galaxy formation?

If a black hole star is indeed the solution, it might have another potential advantage. Systems of this kind had previously been studied in a purely theoretical setting, with much lighter intermediate-mass black holes. There, the setup with central black hole and surrounding gas envelope was seen as a way for the mass of a very early galaxies’ central black holes growing particularly quickly. Given that JWST has found solid evidence for high-mass black holes in the early universe, a configuration that could explain ultra-fast mass growth of black holes would be a welcome addition to current galaxy evolution models. Whether the supermassive black hole stars can do the same is still undetermined, but it would be an intriguing expansion of their role if they did!

As promising as this sounds, caveats are in order. The new result is brand-new. Reporting on it conforms with accepted practice of covering scientific results once they are published in, or at least accepted by, a peer-reviewed journal. But in order to know whether this becomes a trusted part of astronomy’s view of the universe, we will need to wait at least a few more years.

Open questions

The present result does represent a major step forward: the first model that can explain the unusual shape of The Cliff, the extreme object’s Balmer break. Like any significant step forward, it leads to new, open research questions: How could such a black hole star have formed? How can the unusual gas envelope be sustained over a longer time? (Since the black hole gobbles up surrounding gas, there needs to be a mechanism for “refueling” the envelope.) How do the other features of the spectrum of The Cliff come about?

Answering those questions requires contributions from astrophysical modeling, but it is also set to benefit from further in-depth observation. In fact, de Graaff and her team already have the approval of JWST follow-up observations for little red dots of particular interest, such as The Cliff, scheduled for next year.

These future observations will shed light on whether black hole stars are indeed the explanation for how today’s galaxies came to be what they are. At this point in time, that outcome is an intriguing possibility, but far from certain.

Background information

The results described here have been accepted for publication as A. de Graaff et al., “A remarkable Ruby: Absorption in dense gas, rather than evolved stars, drives the extreme Balmer break of a Little Red Dot at z = 3.5” in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. The paper led by Raphael Hviding that presents the full sample of Little Red Dots in the RUBIES data set has been accepted for publication in the same journal.

The MPIA researchers involved are Anna de Graaff, Hans-Walter Rix and Raphael E. Hviding, in collaboration with Gabe Brammer (Cosmic Dawn Center), Jenny Greene (Princeton University), Ivo Labbe (Swinburne University), Rohan Naidu (MIT), Bingjie Wang (Penn State University and Princeton University), and others.

“The Cliff” gets its name from the most prominent feature of its spectrum: a steep rise in what would be the ultraviolet region, at wavelengths just a little shorter than that of violet visible light. “Would” because our universe is expanding: A direct consequence is that, for an object as distant as The Cliff, that wavelength is stretched to almost five times its original value, landing squarely in the near-infrared (“cosmological redshift”). A prominent rise of this kind, at these wavelengths, is known as a “Balmer break.” Balmer breaks can be found in the spectra of ordinary galaxies, where they are usually seen in galaxies that form little to no new stars at the time. But in those cases, the rise is much less steep than The Cliff.




Contacts:

Dr. Markus Pössel
Head of press relations and outreach
Tel:
+49 6221 528-261
pr@mpia.de
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg

Dr. Anna De Graaff
Tel:
+49 6221 528-367
degraaff@mpia.de
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg



Original publication

Anna de Graaff, Hans-Walter Rix, Rohan P. Naidu, et al.
A remarkable ruby: Absorption in dense gas, rather than evolved stars, drives the extreme Balmer break of a little red dot at z = 3.5
Astronomy & Astrophysics, 701, A168 (2025)


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Astronomers Reveal Planet Building’s Secret Ingredient: Magnetism

T
his artist's impression of magnetic fields threading TW Hydrae’s protoplanetary disk shows a change in morphology as they encounter gaps and structures in the disk, suggesting a direct link between magnetic fields and the sculpting of planet-forming regions. Credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/M. Weiss.
Hi-Res File



New ALMA observations show invisible magnetic “threads” stitching together TW Hya’s young solar system

Astronomers have created a detailed map revealing the magnetic fields weaving through TW Hydrae, one of the closest known stars with a planet-forming disk, using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). Led by Dr. Richard Teague at MIT, this new research sheds light on the invisible forces shaping new planets, like those that formed our own solar system over 4.5 billion years ago.

Planets originate in swirling disks of gas and dust that encircle young stars. While telescopes have revealed the shapes and gaps in these disks, scientists have struggled to measure magnetic fields, the unseen agents that guide and sculpt planet-forming material. Magnetic fields are widely thought to play a crucial role in how disks evolve and create planets, but until now, no one had been able to unambiguously map their presence and structure directly in a disk like TW Hya’s.

Previous searches looked for magnetic fields by detecting specific patterns of polarized light, but those signals are exceedingly faint and easily lost amid other effects. Teague and colleagues examined the broadening of specific radio signals—the fingerprints of molecules swirling in the disk—measured by ALMA. By decoding subtle changes in light from the CN molecule, the team could spot the signature widening caused by magnetic field interactions, a phenomenon known as the Zeeman Effect.

The scientists’ analysis revealed magnetic fields as strong as 10 milligauss—a thousand times weaker than a refrigerator magnet, but immense on planet-forming scales—threading the disk between 60 and 120 astronomical units (AU) from the star (one AU is the distance from Earth to the Sun). Intriguingly, the field’s structure changes at a location where a prominent gap slices through the disk, suggesting a direct link between magnetic activity and the sculpting of planet-forming regions.

“The presence and pattern of these fields look remarkably like the kind that may have threaded the solar nebula as our own planets were forming,” said Teague, “This is the best look we’ve ever had at the invisible hand shaping the birthplaces of new worlds.”

This approach opens a new window onto questions that have puzzled scientists for decades: how do magnetic fields drive the evolution of disks? How do they influence which planets form and where? As telescopes and instruments grow more sensitive, astronomers hope to apply these techniques to many more disks. “We are entering an era where we can finally see the magnetic blueprints that help build new planetary systems,” adds Teague. Improvements to ALMA, like the upcoming Wideband Sensitivity Upgrade, have been designed to do exactly this, “Our findings show that what has been promised with the upgrade will be possible on a grand scale.”

This research is a major leap toward understanding not just how planets form around other stars, but how our own cosmic neighborhood came to be.




About NRAO

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) is a facility of the U.S. National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.

About ALMA

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).

ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and operation of ALMA.



Monday, September 15, 2025

Ten Years Later, LIGO is a Black-Hole Hunting Machine

This plot shows gravitational-wave signals recorded by the LIGO Hanford detector almost ten years apart. The top shows data from LIGO's first-ever detection of gravitational waves, an event called GW150914, captured in 2015. The bottom shows the signal known as GW250114, captured in 2025. Both events involve colliding black holes about 1.3 billion light-years away with masses between 30 to 40 times that of our Sun. The purple line shows the data, which are a combination of the signal plus background detector noise. The noise comes from a variety of sources, including seismic motions that jiggle giant mirrors inside LIGO. The green line shows the best-fit prediction from general relativity for each signal. The much lower noise seen today is thanks to cutting-edge improvements made to the LIGO detectors that hush unwanted noise. Credit: LIGO/J. Tissino (GSSI)/R. Hurt (Caltech-IPAC)

This video compares a newly detected gravitational-wave signal called GW250114 with the first gravitational-wave signal ever detected, GW150914, in 2015. Both signals came from colliding black holes, each between 30 to 40 times the mass of the Sun. The video converts the signals to sounds (called "chirps") and plays each detection twice. The first round is played at the original frequencies, in which the gravitational-wave frequencies have been converted directly into sound waves. In the second round, the pitch has been increased by 30 percent to make the chirps easier to hear.

A numerical relativity simulation of the recently observed GW250114 event. The blue and white surface shows a two-dimensional slice of the gravitational waves spiraling outward as the black holes orbit one another. Throughout this inspiral, the gravitational waves grow in magnitude, peaking as the black holes merge, and then decreasing rapidly as the newly formed remnant black hole settles. Credit: Deborah Ferguson, Derek Davis, Rob Coyne (URI) / LIGO / MAYA Collaboration. Simulation performed with NSF's TACC Frontera supercomputer.

This artwork imagines the ultimate front-row seat for GW250114, a powerful collision between two black holes observed in gravitational waves by the US National Science Foundation LIGO. It depicts the view from one of the black holes as it spirals toward its cosmic partner. Ten years after LIGO's landmark detection of gravitational waves, the observatory's improved detectors allowed it to "hear" this celestial collision with unprecedented clarity. The gravitational-wave data enabled scientists to distinguish multiple subtle tones ringing out like a cosmic bell across the universe (imagined here as intertwining musical threads spiraling toward the center). Credit: Aurore Simonnet (SSU/EdEon)/LVK/URI

Infographic explaining the significance of "overtones" detected by LIGO during a black hole merger. Credit: Lucy Reading-Ikkanda/Simons Foundation

Caltech professors Barry Barish, Kip Thorne, and Fiona Harrison with Caltech President Tom Rosenbaum at a press conference for the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics.



LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA celebrate anniversary, announce verification of Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Area Theorem

On September 14, 2015, a signal arrived on Earth, carrying information about a pair of remote black holes that had spiraled together and merged. The signal had traveled about 1.3 billion years to reach us at the speed of light—but it was not made of light. It was a different kind of signal: a quivering of space-time called gravitational waves first predicted by Albert Einstein 100 years prior. On that day 10 years ago, the twin detectors of the US National Science Foundation Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory (NSF LIGO) made the first-ever direct detection of gravitational waves, whispers in the cosmos that had gone unheard until that moment.

The historic discovery meant that researchers could now sense the universe through three different means. Light waves, such as X-rays, optical, radio, and other wavelengths of light, as well as high-energy particles called cosmic rays and neutrinos, had been captured before, but this was the first time anyone had witnessed a cosmic event through the gravitational warping of space-time. For this achievement, first dreamed up more than 40 years prior, three of the team's founders won the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics: MIT's Rainer Weiss, professor of physics, emeritus (who recently passed away at age 92); Caltech's Barry Barish, the Ronald and Maxine Linde Professor of Physics, Emeritus; and Caltech's Kip Thorne, the Richard P. Feynman Professor of Theoretical Physics, Emeritus.

Today, LIGO, which consists of detectors in both Hanford, Washington and Livingston, Louisiana, routinely observes roughly one black hole merger every three days. LIGO now operates in coordination with two international partners, the Virgo gravitational-wave detector in Italy and KAGRA in Japan. Together, the gravitational-wave-hunting network, known as the LVK (LIGO, Virgo, KAGRA), has captured a total of about 300 black hole mergers, some of which are confirmed while others await further analysis. During the network's current science run, the fourth since the first run in 2015, the LVK has discovered more than 200 candidate black hole mergers, more than double the number caught in the first three runs.

LIGO Hanford in Washington and LIGO Livingston in Louisiana.

The dramatic rise in the number of LVK discoveries over the past decade is owed to several improvements to their detectors—some of which involve cutting-edge quantum precision engineering. The LVK detectors remain by far the most precise rulers for making measurements ever created by humans. The space-time distortions induced by gravitational waves are incredibly miniscule. For instance, LIGO detects changes in space-time smaller than 1/10,000 the width of a proton. That's 700 trillion times smaller than the width of a human hair. "Rai Weiss proposed the concept of LIGO in 1972, and I thought, 'This doesn't have much chance at all of working,'" recalls Thorne, an expert on the theory of black holes. "It took me three years of thinking about it on and off and discussing ideas with Rai and Vladimir Braginsky [a Russian physicist], to be convinced this had a significant possibility of success. The technical difficulty of reducing the unwanted noise that interferes with the desired signal was enormous. We had to invent a whole new technology. NSF was just superb at shepherding this project through technical reviews and hurdles."

MIT's Nergis Mavalvala, the Curtis and Kathleen Marble Professor of Astrophysics and dean of the School of Science, says that the challenges the team overcame to make the first discovery are still very much at play. "From the exquisite precision of the LIGO detectors to the astrophysical theories of gravitational-wave sources, to the complex data analyses, all these hurdles had to be overcome, and we continue to improve in all of these areas," Mavalvala says. As the detectors get better, we hunger for farther, fainter sources. LIGO continues to be a technological marvel."

This chart plots discoveries made by the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) network since LIGO's first detection, in 2015, of gravitational waves emanating from a pair of colliding black holes. The detections consist mainly of black hole mergers, but a handful involve neutron stars (either black hole-neutron star collisions or neutron star-neutron star collisions). Credit: LIGO/Caltech/MIT/R. Hurt (IPAC)

The Clearest Signal Yet

LIGO's improved sensitivity is exemplified in a recent discovery of a black hole merger referred to as GW250114 (the numbers denote the date the gravitational-wave signal arrived at Earth: January 14, 2025). The event was not that different from LIGO's first-ever detection (called GW150914)—both involve colliding black holes about 1.3 billion light-years away with masses between 30 to 40 times that of our Sun. But thanks to 10 years of technological advances reducing instrumental noise, the GW250114 signal is dramatically clearer.

"We can hear it loud and clear, and that lets us test the fundamental laws of physics," says LIGO team member Katerina Chatziioannou, Caltech assistant professor of physics and William H. Hurt Scholar, and one of the authors of a new study on GW250114 published in the Physical Review Letters.

By analyzing the frequencies of gravitational waves emitted by the merger, the LVK team provided the best observational evidence captured to date for what is known as the black hole area theorem, an idea put forth by Stephen Hawking in 1971 that says the total surface areas of black holes cannot decrease. When black holes merge, their masses combine, increasing the surface area. But they also lose energy in the form of gravitational waves. Additionally, the merger can cause the combined black hole to increase its spin, which leads to it having a smaller area. The black hole area theorem states that despite these competing factors, the total surface area must grow in size.

Later, Hawking and physicist Jacob Bekenstein concluded that a black hole's area is proportional to its entropy, or degree of disorder. The findings paved the way for later groundbreaking work in the field of quantum gravity, which attempts to unite two pillars of modern physics: general relativity and quantum physics.

In essence, the LIGO detection allowed the team to "hear" two black holes growing as they merged into one, verifying Hawking's theorem. (Virgo and KAGRA were offline during this particular observation.) The initial black holes had a total surface area of 240,000 square kilometers (roughly the size of Oregon), while the final area was about 400,000 square kilometers (roughly the size of California)—a clear increase. This is the second test of the black hole area theorem; an initial test was performed in 2021 using data from the first GW150914 signal, but because that data was not as clean, the results had a confidence level of 95 percent compared to 99.999 percent for the new data.

Thorne recalls Hawking phoning him to ask whether LIGO might be able to test his theorem immediately after he learned of the 2015 gravitational-wave detection. Hawking died in 2018 and sadly did not live to see his theory observationally verified. "If Hawking were alive, he would have reveled in seeing the area of the merged black holes increase," Thorne says.

The trickiest part of this type of analysis had to do with determining the final surface area of the merged black hole. The surface areas of pre-merger black holes can be more readily gleaned as the pair spiral together, roiling space-time and producing gravitational waves. But after the black holes coalesce, the signal is not as clear-cut. During this so-called ringdown phase, the final black hole vibrates like a struck bell.

In the new study, the researchers precisely measured the details of the ringdown phase, which allowed them to calculate the mass and spin of the black hole and, subsequently, determine its surface area. More specifically, they were able, for the first time, to confidently pick out two distinct gravitational-wave modes in the ringdown phase. The modes are like characteristic sounds a bell would make when struck; they have somewhat similar frequencies but die out at different rates, which makes them hard to identify. The improved data for GW250114 meant that the team could extract the modes, demonstrating that the black hole's ringdown occurred exactly as predicted by math models based on the Teukolsky formalism—devised in 1972 by Saul Teukolsky, now a professor at Caltech and Cornell.

Another study from the LVK, submitted to Physical Review Letters today, places limits on a predicted third, higher-pitched tone in the GW250114 signal, and performs some of the most stringent tests yet of general relativity's accuracy in describing merging black holes.

Visualization of the binary black hole merger called GW250114. The animation shows the inspiral and merger of the two black holes, then continues a few milliseconds into the ringdown phase. At that point the gravitational waves are separated into the two modes of the ringing remnant black hole that were identified in the observation. A predicted third tone (that the data place limits on) is also shown. Credit: H. Pfeiffer, A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics), K. Mitman (Cornell University)

"A decade of improvements allowed us to make this exquisite measurement," Chatziioannou says. "It took both of our detectors, in Washington and Louisiana, to do this. I don't know what will happen in 10 more years, but in the first 10 years, we have made tremendous improvements to LIGO's sensitivity. This not only means we are accelerating the rate at which we discover new black holes, but we are also capturing detailed data that expand the scope of what we know about the fundamental properties of black holes."

Jenne Driggers, detection lead senior scientist at LIGO Hanford, adds, "It takes a global village to achieve our scientific goals. From our exquisite instruments, to calibrating the data very precisely, vetting and providing assurances about the fidelity of the data quality, searching the data for astrophysical signals, and packaging all that into something that telescopes can read and act upon quickly, there are a lot of specialized tasks that come together to make LIGO the great success that it is."

Pushing the Limits

LIGO and Virgo have also unveiled neutron stars over the past decade. Like black holes, neutron stars form from the explosive deaths of massive stars, but they weigh less and glow with light. Of note, in August 2017, LIGO and Virgo witnessed an epic collision between a pair of neutron stars—a kilonova—that sent gold and other heavy elements flying into space and drew the gaze of dozens of telescopes around the world, which captured light ranging from high-energy gamma rays to low-energy radio waves. The "multi-messenger" astronomy event marked the first time that both light and gravitational waves had been captured in a single cosmic event. Today, the LVK continues to alert the astronomical community to potential neutron star collisions, who then use telescopes to search the skies for signs of kilonovae.

"The LVK has made big strides in recent years to make sure we're getting high quality data and alerts out to the public in under a minute, so that astronomers can look for multi-messenger signatures from our gravitational-wave candidates," Driggers says.

"The global LVK network is essential to gravitational-wave astronomy," says Gianluca Gemme, Virgo spokesperson and director of research at the National Institute of Nuclear Physics in Italy. "With three or more detectors operating in unison, we can pinpoint cosmic events with greater accuracy, extract richer astrophysical information, and enable rapid alerts for multi-messenger follow-up. Virgo is proud to contribute to this worldwide scientific endeavor."

Other LVK scientific discoveries include the first detection of collisions between one neutron star and one black hole; asymmetrical mergers, in which one black hole is significantly more massive than its partner black hole; the discovery of the lightest black holes known, challenging the idea that there is a "mass gap" between neutron stars and black holes; and the most massive black hole merger seen yet with a merged mass of 225 solar masses. For reference, the previous record holder for the most massive merger had a combined mass of 140 solar masses.

Even in the decades before LIGO began taking data, scientists were building foundations that made the field of gravitational-wave science possible. Breakthroughs in computer simulations of black hole mergers, for example, allow the team to extract and analyze the feeble gravitational-wave signals generated across the universe.

LIGO's technological achievements, beginning as far back as the 1980s, include several far-reaching innovations, such as a new way to stabilize lasers using the so-called Pound–Drever–Hall technique. Invented in 1983 and named for contributing physicists Robert Vivian Pound, the late Ronald Drever of Caltech (a founder of LIGO), and John Lewis Hall, this technique is widely used today in other fields, such as the development of atomic clocks and quantum computers. Other innovations include cutting-edge mirror coatings that almost perfectly reflect laser light; "quantum squeezing" tools that enable LIGO to surpass sensitivity limits imposed by quantum physics; and new AI methods that could further hush certain types of unwanted noise.

"What we are ultimately doing inside LIGO is protecting quantum information and making sure it doesn't get destroyed by external factors," Mavalvala says. "The techniques we are developing are pillars of quantum engineering and have applications across a broad range of devices, such as quantum computers and quantum sensors."

In the coming years, the scientists and engineers of LVK hope to further fine tune their machines, expanding their reach deeper and deeper into space. They also plan to use the knowledge they have gained to build another gravitational-wave detector, LIGO India. Having a third LIGO observatory would greatly improve the precision with which the LVK network can localize gravitational-wave sources.

Looking farther into the future, the team is working on a concept for an even larger detector, called Cosmic Explorer, which would have arms 40 kilometers long (the twin LIGO observatories have 4-kilometer arms). A European project, called Einstein Telescope, also has plans to build one or two huge underground interferometers with arms more than 10 kilometers long. Observatories on this scale would allow scientists to hear the earliest black hole mergers in the universe.

"Just 10 short years ago, LIGO opened our eyes for the first time to gravitational waves and changed the way humanity sees the cosmos," says Aamir Ali, a program director in the NSF Division of Physics, which has supported LIGO since its inception. "There's a whole universe to explore through this completely new lens and these latest discoveries show LIGO is just getting started."

The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Collaboration

LIGO is funded by the US National Science Foundation and operated by Caltech and MIT, which together conceived and built the project. Financial support for the Advanced LIGO project was led by NSF with Germany (Max Planck Society), the United Kingdom (Science and Technology Facilities Council), and Australia (Australian Research Council) making significant commitments and contributions to the project. More than 1,600 scientists from around the world participate in the effort through the LIGO Scientific Collaboration, which includes the GEO Collaboration. Additional partners are listed at my.ligo.org/census.php.

The Virgo Collaboration is currently composed of approximately 1,000 members from 175 institutions in 20 different (mainly European) countries. The European Gravitational Observatory (EGO) hosts the Virgo detector near Pisa, Italy, and is funded by the French National Centre for Scientific Research, the National Institute of Nuclear Physics in Italy, the National Institute of Subatomic Physics in the Netherlands, The Research Foundation – Flanders, and the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research. A list of the Virgo Collaboration groups can be found at: https://www.virgo-gw.eu/about/scientific-collaboration/. More information is available on the Virgo website at https://www.virgo-gw.eu.

KAGRA is the laser interferometer with 3-kilometer arm length in Kamioka, Gifu, Japan. The host institute is the Institute for Cosmic Ray Research of the University of Tokyo, and the project is co-hosted by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization. The KAGRA collaboration is composed of more than 400 members from 128 institutes in 17 countries/regions. KAGRA's information for general audiences is at the website gwcenter.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/. Resources for researchers are accessible from gwwiki.icrr.u-tokyo.ac.jp/JGWwiki/KAGRA.

Written by Whitney Clavin

Source: Caltech/News



Contact:

Whitney Clavin
(626) 395‑1944

wclavin@caltech.edu