Tuesday, June 24, 2025

A New GPS for the Intergalactic Medium: Astronomers Have Found the Home Address for Universe's "Missing" Matter

A landmark study led by the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) has pinpointed the Universe’s “missing” matter using Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs)— brief, bright radio signals from distant galaxies— as a guide. This artist’s conception depicts a bright pulse of radio waves (the FRB) on its journey through the fog between galaxies, known as the intergalactic medium. Long wavelengths, shown in red, are slowed down compared to shorter, bluer wavelengths, allowing astronomers to “weigh” the otherwise invisible ordinary matter. Credit: Melissa Weiss/CfA




Cambridge, MA— A new landmark study has pinpointed the location of the Universe's "missing" matter, and detected the most distant fast radio burst (FRB) on record. Using FRBs as a guide, astronomers at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) and Caltech have shown that more than three-quarters of the Universe's ordinary matter has been hiding in the thin gas between galaxies, marking a major step forward in understanding how matter interacts and behaves in the Universe. They’ve used the new data to make the first detailed measurement of ordinary matter distribution across the cosmic web.

For decades, scientists have known that at least half of the Universe's ordinary, or baryonic matter—composed primarily of protons—was unaccounted for. Previously, astronomers have used techniques including X-ray emission and ultraviolet observations of distant quasars to find hints of vast amounts of this missing mass in the form of very thin, warm gas in between galaxies. Because that matter exists as hot, low-density gas, it was largely invisible to most telescopes, leaving scientists to estimate but not confirm its amount or location.

Enter FRBs— brief, br ight radio signals from distant galaxies that scientists only recently showed could measure baryonic matter in the Universe, but until now could not find its location. In the new study, researchers analyzed 60 FRBs, ranging from ~11.74 million light years away—FRB20200120E in galaxy M81—to ~9.1 billion light years away—FRB 20230521B, the most distant FRB on record. This allowed them to pin down the missing matter to the space between galaxies, or the intergalactic medium (IGM).

"The decades-old 'missing baryon problem' was never about whether the matter existed," said Liam Connor, CfA astronomer and lead author of the new study. "It was always: Where is it? Now, thanks to FRBs, we know: three-quarters of it is floating between galaxies in the cosmic web." In other words, scientists now know the home address of the “missing” matter.

By measuring how much each FRB signal was slowed down as it passed through space, Connor and his team tracked the gas along its journey. "FRBs act as cosmic flashlights," Connor, who is also an assistant professor of astronomy at Harvard, said. "They shine through the fog of the intergalactic medium, and by precisely measuring how the light slows down, we can weigh that fog, even when it's too faint to see."

The results were clear: Approximately 76% of the Universe's baryonic matter lies in the IGM. About 15% resides in galaxy halos, and a small fraction is burrowed in stars or amid cold galactic gas.

This distribution lines up with predictions from advanced cosmological simulations, but has never been directly confirmed until now.

"It's a triumph of modern astronomy," said Vikram Ravi, an assistant professor of astronomy at Caltech and co-author of the paper. "We're beginning to see the Universe's structure and composition in a whole new light, thanks to FRBs. These brief flashes allow us to trace the otherwise invisible matter that fills the vast spaces between galaxies."

Finding the missing baryons isn’t just an exercise in building an address book or taking a census. Their distribution holds the key to unlocking deep mysteries about how galaxies form, how matter clumps in the Universe, and how light travels across billions of light-years.

"Baryons are pulled into galaxies by gravity, but supermassive black holes and exploding stars can blow them back out—like a cosmic thermostat cooling things down if the temperature gets too high," said Connor. "Our results show this feedback must be efficient, blasting gas out of galaxies and into the IGM."

And this is just the beginning for FRB cosmology. "We're entering a golden age," said Ravi, who also serves as the co-PI of Caltech’s Deep Synoptic Array-110 (DSA-110). "Next-generation radio telescopes like the DSA-2000 and the Canadian Hydrogen Observatory and Radio-transient Detector will detect thousands of FRBs, allowing us to map the cosmic web in incredible detail."/div>
The study is published today in Nature Astronomy.




Reference

Connor, L., et al. (2025). A gas-rich cosmic web revealed by the partitioning of the missing baryons. Nature Astronomy. doi:10.1038/s41550-025-02566-y



About the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian

The Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian is a collaboration between Harvard and the Smithsonian designed to ask—and ultimately answer—humanity's greatest unresolved questions about the nature of the universe. The Center for Astrophysics is headquartered in Cambridge, MA, with research facilities across the U.S. and around the world.


Monday, June 23, 2025

Centre of activity

A spiral galaxy, seen at an angle that gives it an oval shape. It has two spiral arms that curl out from the centre. They start narrow but broaden out as they wrap around the galaxy before merging into a faint halo. The galaxy’s disc is golden in the centre with a bright core, and pale blue outside that. A swirl of dark dust strands and speckled blue star-forming regions follow the arms through the disc. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, M. J. Koss, A. J. Barth

The light that the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope collected to create this Picture of the Week reached the telescope after a journey of 250 million years. Its source was the spiral galaxy UGC 11397, which resides in the constellation Lyra (The Lyre). At first glance, UGC 11397 appears to be an average spiral galaxy: it sports two graceful spiral arms that are illuminated by stars and defined by dark, clumpy clouds of dust.

What sets UGC 11397 apart from a typical spiral lies at its centre, where a supermassive black hole containing 174 million times the mass of the Sun is growing. As a black hole ensnares gas, dust, and even entire stars from its vicinity, this doomed matter heats up and puts on a fantastic cosmic light show. Material trapped by the black hole emits light from gamma rays to radio waves and can brighten and fade without warning. But in some galaxies, including UGC 11397, thick clouds of dust hide much of this energetic activity from view in optical light.  Despite this, UGC 11397's actively growing black hole was revealed through its bright X-ray emission — high-energy light that can pierce the surrounding dust. This led astronomers to classify it as a Type 2 Seyfert galaxy, a category used for active galaxies whose central regions are hidden from view in visible light by a doughnut-shaped cloud of dust and gas.

Using Hubble, researchers will study hundreds of galaxies that, like UGC 11397, harbour a supermassive black hole that is gaining mass. The Hubble observations will help researchers weigh nearby supermassive black holes, understand how black holes grew early in the Universe’s history, and even study how stars form in the extreme environment found at the very centre of a galaxy.



Sunday, June 22, 2025

Exoplanet GJ 504 b, " Second Jupiter " Directly Observed


Detail :
GJ 504 b is an exoplanet orbiting a sun-like star GJ 504. It is estimated to be three to six times more massive than Jupiter, making it the least massive planet ever directly imaged. This faint and cold planet, often referred to as the "second Jupiter," was discovered as part of the Strategic Explorations of Exoplanets and Disks with Subaru (SEEDS) Project. The SEEDS project aimed to conduct direct observations of exoplanets to discover and explore their features using the coronagraph imager HiCIAO and the adaptive optics system with 188 elements AO 188.

GJ 504 is a star in the constellation Virgo, about 60 light-years away from Earth. The planet GJ 504 b is captured in the upper right of the star, at the center of the image. The apparent distance between GJ 504 and GJ 504 b is 44 astronomical units (au), which is similar to the distance between the Sun and Pluto.

Exoplanets are incredibly faint, making direct imaging very challenging. However, direct observation enables us not only to discover these planets but also to characterize them. For instance, GJ 504 b was found to have a very low temperature of approximately 500 Kelvin (or 230 degrees Celsius), and its atmosphere is less cloudy compared to those of other exoplanets previously discovered.

Distance from Earth:About 60 light-years
Instrument: HiCIAO (High Contrast Instrument for the Subaru Next Generation Adaptive Optics) + AO188

Relevant Links
Source:  Subaru Telescope


Saturday, June 21, 2025

Largest Oort Cloud Comet Ever Observed Reveals Its Secrets with ALMA’s Powerful Gaze

An artist rendition of comet C/2014 UN271, the largest known comet in the Oort Cloud
Credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/M.Weiss.
Hi-Res File



Giant comet’s molecular activity and chemistry detected at record distance

A team of astronomers has made a groundbreaking discovery by detecting molecular activity in comet C/2014 UN271 (Bernardinelli-Bernstein)—the largest and second most distantly active comet ever observed from the Oort Cloud. Using the powerful Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile, researchers observed this giant comet while it was more than halfway to Neptune, at an astonishing distance of 16.6 times the distance between the Sun and Earth.

C/2014 UN271 is a true behemoth, measuring nearly 85 miles (140 km) across—more than 10 times the size of most known comets. Until now, little was known about how such cold, distant objects behave. The new observations revealed complex and evolving jets of carbon monoxide gas erupting from the comet’s nucleus, providing the first direct evidence of what drives its activity so far from the Sun.

“These measurements give us a look at how this enormous, icy world works,” said lead author Nathan Roth of American University and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. “We’re seeing explosive outgassing patterns that raise new questions about how this comet will evolve as it continues its journey toward the inner solar system.”

The ALMA telescope observed C/2014 UN271 by capturing light from carbon monoxide gas in its atmosphere and heat (thermal emission) when the comet was still very far from the Sun. Thanks to ALMA’s high sensitivity and resolution, scientists could focus on the extremely faint signal from such a cold, distant object. Building on previous ALMA observations (Lellouch+2022, A&A, 659, L1) which first characterized the large nucleus size of UN271, these new findings measured the thermal signal to further calculate the comet’s size and the amount of dust surrounding its nucleus. Their values for the nucleus size and dust mass are in agreement with previous ALMA observations and confirm it as the largest Oort Cloud comet ever found. ALMA’s ability to precisely measure these signals made this study possible, offering a clearer picture of this distant, icy giant.

The discovery not only marks the first detection of molecular outgassing in this record-setting comet, but also offers a rare glimpse into the chemistry and dynamics of objects originating from the farthest reaches of our solar system. As C/2014 UN271 approaches the Sun, scientists anticipate that more frozen gases will begin to vaporize, revealing even more about the comet’s primitive makeup and the early solar system. Such discoveries help answer fundamental questions about where Earth and its water came from, and how life-friendly environments might form elsewhere.




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.


Friday, June 20, 2025

Seeding Life in the Oceans of Moons

Plumes of salty water ice emerge from Enceladus's cracked ice shell
Credit:
NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Authors: Shannon M. MacKenzie et al.
First Author’s Institution: Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Status: Published in PSJ

A steroids and meteorites are usually associated with doom and destruction (rest easy, dinosaurs), but they may have also been essential for the emergence of life on Earth. It is popularly theorized that some of the base building blocks of life, like volatiles and organics, were delivered here by meteorites and that the energy of these impacts synthesized even more, like HCN and amino acids. Expectedly, the same should be true for other planets. Today’s article explores this possibility using nearby analogies for potentially habitable exoplanets: our solar system’s ocean worlds.

Why Do Meteorites Carry Organics?

The solar system formed from one massive cloud of gas and dust, so the composition everywhere is approximately the same. However, early Earth was an extremely hot ball of magma that destroyed its organic matter. Luckily, organics were able to survive in objects like meteorites in the cold outskirts of the solar system.

Figure 1: Saturn’s moon Enceladus with a liquid water ocean beneath the icy crust. Jets on the surface are strong indicators of hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor.Credit:
JPL

Today’s authors studied typical impact events on Jupiter’s moon Europa and Saturn’s moons Enceladus and Titan to determine 1) if organics could survive the impacts, and 2) what processes could occur in the resulting melted material in the impact craters before it refreezes.

Ocean Worlds in Our Neighborhood

In the search for extraterrestrial life, we start by looking for the basic necessities — and water is a big one. Though Earth is the only planet in our solar system with liquid water, several moons of Jupiter and Saturn have it as well. These moons are beyond the balmy habitable zone, so their surfaces are covered in icy crusts, but beneath those crusts are subsurface oceans of liquid water, making these moons “ocean worlds” (see Figure 1). On their own, the presence of water makes these moons astrobiologically interesting, and they will also elucidate ocean worlds that are further away.

Today’s authors studied typical impact events on Jupiter’s moon Europa and Saturn’s moons Enceladus and Titan to determine 1) if organics could survive the impacts, and 2) what processes could occur in the resulting melted material in the impact craters before it refreezes.

Figure 2: The modeled impact velocities and maximum pressures for icy (black) and rocky (gray) impactors. Survivable pressures of various organics (green and gray colored bars on the y-axis) are within the range of observed velocities and pressures from craters on each ocean world moon (colored boxes). Credit: MacKenzie et al. 2024

Surviving the Impact

To evaluate survivability, the authors modeled the maximum pressure of an impact on an ocean world’s ice crust for a range of impact velocities and angles. Around Jupiter and Saturn, most impactors are either icy or rocky objects that originate from the Kuiper Belt or Oort cloud, so the authors modeled both types of impactors. Rocky impactors create higher pressures (shown in gray in Figure 2) than icy impactors (shown in black in Figure 2). From the sizes of observed craters on the ocean world moons, previous works determined the velocities and pressures of impacts, which are shown by the colored boxes in Figure 2. Finally, a number of other works have estimated the ranges of survivable pressures for biota and biologically important molecules, which are shown by the green and black bars on the right of Figure 2. Impressively, the survivable pressure ranges are within the observed and modeled pressures of impacts! So these life building blocks can be, and likely have been, deposited on the ocean world moons.

Crater Melt Pools

When an impactor hits the icy crust, some of the ice will melt. The deposited organics will end up in a pool of liquid water in the crater, which is an ample environment for prebiotic chemistry until the pool freezes. From the observed crater sizes and modeled velocities, the authors estimated how much liquid water could remain in a crater and how long it would take to freeze. Freeze times ranged from a few Earth years for the smallest craters (<4 a="" acids="" amino="" as="" been="" br="" conditions="" crater="" craters="" diameter="" earth="" few="" for="" have="" hundreds="" in="" is="" kilometers="" labs="" largest="" melt="" mimicking="" months="" of="" on="" pools.="" possible="" short="" so="" synthesis="" synthesized="" the="" thousands="" to="" years="">
The pools eventually freeze, trapping any deposited or synthesized material on the icy surface. Other processes, like future impacts, are required to break through the icy crust and transport material to the subsurface oceans where theorized hydrothermal vents could allow more complex development.

Tangible Evidence

In summary, survivable impacts on the ocean world moons are common, and each provides an opportunity for prebiotic chemistry to arise. Unlike most objects astronomers study, the proximity of these ocean worlds means that we can thoroughly understand them through physical samples. NASA’s Cassini detected organic compounds in the plumes that burst off the surface of Enceladus, and the Dragonfly mission is set to head for Titan in 2028 to collect and analyze samples once it arrives in 2034. In the coming decades, we may witness the discovery of more precursors to life or microbial life itself in the subsurface oceans of moons in our solar system, and gain radical insight into the ocean worlds beyond.

Original astrobite edited by Sonja Panjkov




About the author, Annelia Anderson:

I’m an Astrophysics PhD candidate at the University of Alabama, using simulations to study the circumgalactic medium. Beyond research, I’m interested in historical astronomy, and hope to someday write astronomy children’s books. Beyond astronomy, I enjoy making music, cooking, and my cat.



Editor’s Note: Astrobites is a graduate-student-run organization that digests astrophysical literature for undergraduate students. As part of the partnership between the AAS and astrobites, we occasionally repost astrobites content here at AAS Nova. We hope you enjoy this post from astrobites; the original can be viewed at astrobites.org.


Thursday, June 19, 2025

Astronomers capture most detailed thousand-colour image of a galaxy

PR Image eso2510a
MUSE view of the Sculptor Galaxy

PR Image eso2510b
MUSE view of ionised gas in the Sculptor Galaxy

PR Image eso2510c
Digitized Sky Survey image of NGC 253

PR Image eso2510d
The galaxy NGC 253 in the constellation of Sculptor



Videos


Astronomers capture galaxy in thousands of colours | ESO News
PR Video eso2510a
Astronomers capture galaxy in thousands of colours | ESO News

Zooming into a thousand-colour image of the Sculptor Galaxy
PR Video eso2510b
Zooming into a thousand-colour image of the Sculptor Galaxy

The Sculptor Galaxy in a myriad of colours
PR Video eso2510c
The Sculptor Galaxy in a myriad of colours

Animation of the rotation of the Sculptor Galaxy
PR Video eso2510d
Animation of the rotation of the Sculptor Galaxy







Astronomers have created a galactic masterpiece: an ultra-detailed image that reveals previously unseen features in the Sculptor Galaxy. Using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (ESO’s VLT), they observed this nearby galaxy in thousands of colours simultaneously. By capturing vast amounts of data at every single location, they created a galaxy-wide snapshot of the lives of stars within Sculptor.

"Galaxies are incredibly complex systems that we are still struggling to understand," says ESO researcher Enrico Congiu, who led a new Astronomy & Astrophysics study on Sculptor. Reaching hundreds of thousands of light-years across, galaxies are extremely large, but their evolution depends on what’s happening at much smaller scales. “The Sculptor Galaxy is in a sweet spot,” says Congiu. “It is close enough that we can resolve its internal structure and study its building blocks with incredible detail, but at the same time, big enough that we can still see it as a whole system.”

A galaxy’s building blocks — stars, gas and dust — emit light at different colours. Therefore, the more shades of colour there are in an image of a galaxy, the more we can learn about its inner workings. While conventional images contain only a handful of colours, this new Sculptor map comprises thousands. This tells astronomers everything they need to know about the stars, gas and dust within, such as their age, composition, and motion.

To create this map of the Sculptor Galaxy, which is 11 million light-years away and is also known as NGC 253, the researchers observed it for over 50 hours with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO’s VLT. The team had to stitch together over 100 exposures to cover an area of the galaxy about 65 000 light-years wide.

According to co-author Kathryn Kreckel from Heidelberg University, Germany, this makes the map a potent tool: “We can zoom in to study individual regions where stars form at nearly the scale of individual stars, but we can also zoom out to study the galaxy as a whole.”
In their first analysis of the data, the team uncovered around 500 planetary nebulae, regions of gas and dust cast off from dying Sun-like stars, in the Sculptor Galaxy. Co-author Fabian Scheuermann, a doctoral student at Heidelberg University, puts this number into context: “Beyond our galactic neighbourhood, we usually deal with fewer than 100 detections per galaxy.”

Because of the properties of planetary nebulae, they can be used as distance markers to their host galaxies. “Finding the planetary nebulae allows us to verify the distance to the galaxy — a critical piece of information on which the rest of the studies of the galaxy depend,” says Adam Leroy, a professor at The Ohio State University, USA, and study co-author.

Future projects using the map will explore how gas flows, changes its composition, and forms stars all across this galaxy. “How such small processes can have such a big impact on a galaxy whose entire size is thousands of times bigger is still a mystery,” says Congiu.

Source: ESO/News



More information

This research was presented in a paper accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics.

The team is composed of E. Congiu (European Southern Observatory, Chile [ESO Chile]), F. Scheuermann (Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Zentrum für Astronomie der Universität Heidelberg, Germany [ARI-ZAH]), K. Kreckel (ARI-ZAH), A. Leroy (Department of Astronomy and Center for Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, The Ohio State University [OSU], USA), E. Emsellem (European Southern Observatory, Germany [ESO Garching] and Univ. Lyon, Univ. Lyon1, ENS de Lyon, CNRS, Centre de Recherche Astrophysique de Lyon, France), F. Belfiore (INAF – Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Italy), J. Hartke (Finnish Centre for Astronomy with ESO [FINCA] and Tuorla Observatory, Department of Physics and Astronomy [Tuorla], University of Turku, Finland), G. Anand (Space Telescope Science Institute, USA), O. V. Egorov (ARI-ZAH), B. Groves (International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, University of Western Australia, Australia), T. Kravtsov (Tuorla and FINCA), D. Thilker (Department of Physics and Astronomy, The Johns Hopkins University, USA), C. Tovo (Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia ‘G. Galilei’, Universit‘a di Padova, Italy), F. Bigiel (Argelander-Institut für Astronomie, Universität Bonn, Germany), G. A. Blanc (Observatories of the Carnegie Institution for Science, USA, and Departamento de Astronomía, Universidad de Chile, Chile), A. D. Bolatto and S. A. Cronin (Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, USA), D. A. Dale (Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Wyoming, USA), R. McClain (OSU), J. E. Méndez-Delgado (Instituto de Astronomía, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico), E. K. Oakes (Department of Physics, University of Connecticut, USA), R. S. Klessen (Universität Heidelberg, Zentrum für Astronomie, Institut für Theoretische Astrophysik and Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Wissenschaftliches Rechnen, Germany, Center for Astrophysics Harvard & Smithsonian, USA, and Elizabeth S. and Richard M. Cashin Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies at Harvard University, USA) E. Schinnerer (Max-Planck-Institut für Astronomie, Germany), T. G. Williams (Sub-department of Astrophysics, Department of Physics, University of Oxford, UK).

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:

Enrico Congiu
European Southern Observatory (ESO)
Santiago, Chile
Email:
econgiu@eso.org

Kathryn Kreckel
Heidelberg University
Heidelberg, Germany
Tel: +49 6221 54-1859
Email
: kathryn.kreckel@uni-heidelberg.de

Adam Leroy
The Ohio State University
Columbus, Ohio, USA
Tel: +1 614 292-1765
Email:
leroy.42@osu.edu

Fabian Scheuermann
Heidelberg University
Heidelberg, Germany
Email:
f.scheuermann@uni-heidelberg.de

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


Caution: Planets under construction

Astronomers may have caught a still-forming planet on camera, hidden somewhere in this stellar snapshot.
Credit: ESO/C. Ginski et al.

Today’s Picture of the Week is a clos,e-up of the star RIK 113, seen here surrounded by a cloud of gas and dust called a protoplanetary disc. These discs are a common feature around young stars, containing all the building blocks needed to make a new planet. Over time, these dusty discs will fragment and condense under the influence of gravity, forming larger objects like protoplanets. These planetary embryos carve out gaps in the dust around them, forming the intricate, ring-like structures that we can see in this disc.

The true complexity of this protoplanetary disc was first uncovered by the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in a study published last year. These results showed the presence of a gap, which hinted at a planet-like object embedded within it.

This prompted another team of astronomers, led by Christian Ginski at the University of Galway, Ireland, to follow up with observations from ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT). Using the SPHERE instrument they found that the inner ring has intriguing spiral features. A detailed analysis of the data uncovered not just one, but two potential signals from planets around RIK 113, not far from the original detection with ALMA.

For now, these signals are still more of a suggestion than a direct confirmation. However, with two separate studies from both ALMA and the VLT indicating the presence of at least one planet, these results are extremely promising for a future discovery.

Link
Source: ESO/potw


Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Following Photons Through Curved Spacetimes


Today’s featured image is a beautiful representation of how simulated images of active black holes are made. In a recent research article, a team led by Aniket Sharma (Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Mohali) introduced Mahakala, a new ray-tracing algorithm that expertly tracks photons as they navigate the warped spacetimes surrounding black holes. Mahakala is named for the Egyptian deity who, as Sharma and collaborators describe, is “believed to be the depiction of absolute black, and the one who has the power to dissolve time and space into himself.” The image above shows a simulated accreting black hole at a wavelength of 1.3 millimeters, which is the same wavelength used by the Event Horizon Telescope to view the supermassive black holes at the center of the Milky Way and the galaxy Messier 87. The dotted lines streaming off to the right represent the paths that photons took on their way to the viewer as they curved around the black hole, which is visible among the forest of lines. In this representation, the color of each dot shows the synchrotron emission generated at that point in three-dimensional space. The team hopes that Mahakala, which can be run quickly and easily from a Python Jupyter notebook, helps make the complex world of general relativistic magnetohydrodynamics simulations more accessible. You can try it for yourself or learn more from the article linked below.

By Kerry Hensley

Citation

“Mahakala: A Python-Based Modular Ray-Tracing and Radiative Transfer Algorithm for Curved Spacetimes,” Aniket Sharma et al 2025 ApJ 985 40. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/adc104



Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Small but mighty

This Hubble image shows the galaxy
NGC 4449. The field is dominated by dust that appears in dark red, with scattered brighter regions of star formation as bright pink globules. The background shows countless blue stars peeking around the dusty regions. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, E. Sabbi, D. Calzetti, A. Aloisi

This portrait from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope puts the nearby galaxy NGC 4449 in the spotlight. The galaxy is situated just 12.5 million light-years away in the constellation Canes Venatici (The Hunting Dogs). It is a member of the M94 galaxy group, which is near the Local Group of galaxies to which the Milky Way belongs.

NGC 4449 is a dwarf galaxy, which means that it is far smaller and contains fewer stars than the Milky Way. But don’t let its small size fool you — NGC 4449 packs a punch when it comes to making stars! This galaxy is currently forming new stars at a much faster rate than expected for its size, which makes it known as a starburst galaxy. Most starburst galaxies churn out stars mainly in their centres, but NGC 4449 is alight with brilliant young stars throughout. Researchers believe that this global burst of star formation came about because of NGC 4449’s interactions with its galactic neighbours. Because NGC 4449 is so close, it provides an excellent opportunity for Hubble to study how interactions between galaxies can influence the formation of new stars.

A Hubble image of NGC 4449 was previously released in 2007. This new version incorporates several additional wavelengths of light that Hubble collected for multiple observing programmes. These programmes encompass an incredible range of science, from a deep dive into NGC 4449’s star-formation history to the mapping of the brightest, hottest, and most massive stars in more than two dozen nearby galaxies.

The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope has also observed NGC 4449, revealing in intricate detail the galaxy’s tendrils of dusty gas, glowing from the intense starlight radiated by the flourishing young stars.



Monday, June 16, 2025

Another First: NASA Webb Identifies Frozen Water in Young Star System

For the first time, researchers confirmed the presence of crystalline water ice in a dusty debris disk that orbits a Sun-like star, using NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. All the frozen water detected by Webb is paired with fine dust particles throughout the disk. The majority of the water ice observed is found where it’s coldest and farthest from the star. The closer to the star the researchers looked, the less water ice they found. Credits/Artwork: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Ralf Crawford (STScI)



Is frozen water scattered in systems around other stars? Astronomers have long expected it is, partially based on previous detections of its gaseous form, water vapor, and its presence in our own solar system.

Now there is definitive evidence: Researchers confirmed the presence of crystalline water ice in a dusty debris disk that orbits a Sun-like star 155 light-years away using detailed data known as spectra from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. (The term water ice specifies its makeup, since many other frozen molecules are also observed in space, such as carbon dioxide ice, or “dry ice.”) In 2008, data from NASA’s retired Spitzer Space Telescope hinted at the possibility of frozen water in this system.

“Webb unambiguously detected not just water ice, but crystalline water ice, which is also found in locations like Saturn’s rings and icy bodies in our solar system’s Kuiper Belt,” said Chen Xie, the lead author of the new paper and an assistant research scientist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.

All the frozen water Webb detected is paired with fine dust particles throughout the disk — like itsy-bitsy “dirty snowballs.” The results published Wednesday in the journal Nature.

Astronomers have been waiting for this definitive data for decades. “When I was a graduate student 25 years ago, my advisor told me there should be ice in debris disks, but prior to Webb, we didn’t have instruments sensitive enough to make these observations,” said Christine Chen, a co-author and an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. “What’s most striking is that this data looks similar to the telescope’s other recent observations of Kuiper Belt objects in our own solar system.”

Water ice is a vital ingredient in disks around young stars — it heavily influences the formation of giant planets and may also be delivered by small bodies like comets and asteroids to fully formed rocky planets. Now that researchers have detected water ice with Webb, they have opened the door for all researchers to study how these processes play out in new ways in many other planetary systems.

Rocks, Dust, Ice Rushing Around

The star, cataloged HD 181327, is significantly younger than our Sun. It’s estimated to be 23 million years old, compared to the Sun’s more mature 4.6 billion years. The star is slightly more massive than the Sun, and it’s hotter, which led to the formation of a slightly larger system around it.

Webb’s observations confirm a significant gap between the star and its debris disk — a wide area that is free of dust. Farther out, its debris disk is similar to our solar system’s Kuiper Belt, where dwarf planets, comets, and other bits of ice and rock are found (and sometimes collide with one another). Billions of years ago, our Kuiper Belt was likely similar to this star’s debris disk.

“HD 181327 is a very active system,” Chen said. “There are regular, ongoing collisions in its debris disk. When those icy bodies collide, they release tiny particles of dusty water ice that are perfectly sized for Webb to detect.”

Frozen Water — Almost Everywhere

Water ice isn’t spread evenly throughout this system. The majority is found where it’s coldest and farthest from the star. “The outer area of the debris disk consists of over 20% water ice,” Xie said.

The closer in the researchers looked, the less water ice they found. Toward the middle of the debris disk, Webb detected about 8% water ice. Here, it’s likely that frozen water particles are produced slightly faster than they are destroyed. In the area of the debris disk closest to the star, Webb detected almost none. It’s likely that the star’s ultraviolet light vaporizes the closest specks of water ice. It’s also possible that rocks known as planetesimals have “locked up” frozen water in their interiors, which Webb can’t detect.

This team and many more researchers will continue to search for — and study — water ice in debris disks and actively forming planetary systems throughout our Milky Way galaxy. “The presence of water ice helps facilitate planet formation,” Xie said. “Icy materials may also ultimately be ‘delivered’ to terrestrial planets that may form over a couple hundred million years in systems like this.”

The researchers observed HD 181327 with Webb’s NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph), which is super-sensitive to extremely faint dust particles that can only be detected from space.

The James Webb Space Telescope is the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).

To learn more about Webb, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/webb




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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

Christine Pulliam
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Sunday, June 15, 2025

Record-Breaking Cosmic Structure Discovered in Colossal Galaxy Cluster

This new composite image made with X-rays from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (blue and purple), radio data from the MeerKAT radio telescope (orange and yellow), and an optical image from PanSTARRS (red, green, and blue) shows PLCK G287.0+32.9. This massive galaxy cluster, located about 5 billion light-years from Earth, was first detected by astronomers in 2011. Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/K. Rajpurohit et al.; Optical: PanSTARRS; Radio: SARAO/MeerKAT; Image processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk.
High Resolution Image



A CfA astronomer and her team have imaged the largest known cloud of energetic particles surrounding a galaxy cluster, and raised new questions about what powers and re-energizes particles in the Universe over time.

Cambridge, MA - Astronomers have discovered the largest known cloud of energetic particles surrounding a galaxy cluster— spanning nearly 20 million light-years. The finding challenges long-standing theories about how particles stay energized over time. Instead of being powered by nearby galaxies, this vast region seems to be energized by giant shockwaves and turbulence moving through the hot gas between galaxies.

The results of the new study, led by scientists at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA), were presented today in a press conference at the 246th meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS).

Located five billion light-years from Earth, PLCK G287.0+32.9 is a massive galaxy cluster that has piqued the interest of astronomers since it was first detected in 2011. Earlier studies spotted two bright relics— giant shockwaves that lit up the cluster's edges. But they missed the vast, faint radio emission that fills the space between them. New radio images reveal that the entire cluster is wrapped in a faint radio glow, nearly 20 times the diameter of the Milky Way, suggesting that something much larger and more powerful is at work.

"We expected a bright pair of relics at the cluster's edges, which would have matched prior observations, but instead we found the whole cluster glowing in radio light," said lead author, Dr. Kamlesh Rajpurohit, a Smithsonian astronomer at the CfA. "A cloud of energetic particles this large has never been observed in this galaxy cluster or any other." The prior record holder, Abell 2255, spans roughly 16.3 million light-years.

Deep in the cluster's central region, the team detected a radio halo approximately 11.4 million light-years across, the first of its size seen at 2.4 GHz, a radio frequency where halos this large are usually not visible. The findings raise questions for the team because they provide strong evidence for the presence of cosmic ray electrons and magnetic fields stretched out to the periphery of clusters. However, it remains unclear how these electrons accelerated over such large distances.

"Very extended radio halos are mostly only visible at lower frequencies because the electrons that produce them have lost energy — they're old and have cooled over time," said Rajpurohit. "With the discovery of this enormous size halo we are now seeing radio emission extending all the way between the giant shocks and beyond, filling the entire cluster. That suggests something is actively accelerating, or re-accelerating the electrons, but none of the usual suspects apply. We think that giant shockwaves or turbulence could be responsible, but we need more theoretical models to find a definitive answer." The discovery provides researchers a new way to study cosmic magnetic fields— one of the major unanswered questions in astrophysics— that could help scientists understand how magnetic fields shape the Universe on the largest scales.

"We're starting to see the Universe in ways we never could before," said Rajpurohit. "And that means rethinking how energy and matter move through its largest structures." Observations with NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, reveal a box-shaped structure, a comet-like tail, and several other distinct features in the cluster's hot gas, suggesting that the cluster is highly disturbed. Some of these X-ray features coincide with radio-detected structures, suggesting giant shocks and turbulence driven by mergers accelerating or re-accelerating electrons. In the center of the cluster, some of these features may be caused by a merger of two smaller galaxy clusters, or from outbursts produced by a supermassive black hole, or both.




Media Contact:

Amy C. Oliver
Public Affairs Officer
Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian

amy.oliver@cfa.harvard.edu



Resources

K. Rajpurohit et al."Diffuse Radio Emission Spanning 6 Mpc in the Highly Disturbed Galaxy Cluster PLCK G287.0+32.9," pending submission

K. Rajpurohit et al. "Radial Profiles of Radio Halos in Massive Galaxy Clusters: Diffuse Giants Over 2 Mpc" submitted to ApJ, preprint is
here



About the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian

The Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian is a collaboration between Harvard and the Smithsonian designed to ask—and ultimately answer—humanity's greatest unresolved questions about the nature of the universe. The Center for Astrophysics is headquartered in Cambridge, MA, with research facilities across the U.S. and around the world.


Cellular Coordinate System Reveals Secrets of Active Matter

Left: Active matter composed of filaments and motors. Center: Active matter overlaid with a fluorescence-cancelling grid, creating a coordinate system to measure deformation. Right: As the system contracts, the coordinate system deforms as well. Credit: Courtesy of S. Hirokawa


An example of bioengineered microtubules being directed by light
Credit: Caltech



All humans who have ever lived were once each an individual cell, which then divided countless times to produce a body made up of around 10 trillion cells. These cells have busy lives, executing all kinds of dynamic movement: contracting every time we flex a muscle, migrating toward the site of an injury, and rhythmically beating for decades on end.

Cells are an example of active matter. As inanimate matter must burn fuel to move, like airplanes and cars, active matter is similarly animated by its consumption of energy. The basic molecule of cellular energy is adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which catalyzes chemical reactions that enable cellular machinery to work.

Caltech researchers have now developed a bioengineered coordinate system to observe the movement of cellular machinery. The research enables a better understanding of how cells create order out of chaos, such as during embryonic development or in the organized movements of chromosomes that are a prerequisite to faithful cell division.

The work was conducted in the laboratories of Rob Phillips, the Fred and Nancy Morris Professor of Biophysics, Biology, and Physics, and Matt Thomson, Professor of Computational Biology and Heritage Medical Research Institute Investigator. A paper describing the study appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The basic units of cellular machinery are motors and filaments made of proteins, which act like the muscles and skeleton of the cell. These structures self-assemble, like little protein robots, to enable cells to move. In 2018, former graduate student Tyler Ross (PhD '21) engineered a system of these components that can be controlled by light in a lab setting, enabling researchers to observe and experiment upon their movements. Each experimental system is only the width of a human hair, containing thousands of individual motors and filaments.

In the new work, led by former graduate student Soichi Hirokawa (PhD '23), the team developed additional light patterns that create a grid, or coordinate system, upon the mixture of motors and filaments. To understand this, imagine a sheet of rubber with a grid patterned on it—as the rubber stretches and deforms, the grid does as well. Once a set of regularly spaced squares, the grid's deformation gives a measure of which regions are being stretched or squeezed and by how much. In this way, the team can track the movements of a collection of filaments and motors—they are too small to be seen themselves, but the light-patterned grid, each square about 12-by-12 micrometers, is visible with a microscope.

"The system allows us to observe how these biomolecules reorganize as they collectively form a structure," says Hirokawa. "With it, we can distinguish the processes that contribute to the deformations that we observe on these squares."

This new system enabled the team to measure the competing dynamics of active shrinking and a process that influences cellular self-assembly, called diffusion. Taking a mixture of motors and filaments, the researchers triggered the components to contract inward, like a shrinking circle. But each component naturally still experiences some random movement, or diffusion, jiggling every which way as the whole contracts. The deforming coordinate system enabled the team to watch this competition between active contraction and random diffusion, and characterize it. Interestingly, they found that the more ATP is in the system, the more the molecules randomly diffuse.

"The formation of patterns and structure in biology has to fight against this randomness," says Phillips. "The system is able to organize despite the forces of chaos."

The dynamic coordinate system introduced here could be used in other contexts as well.

"Order is particularly important in processes like embryonic development," says staff scientist and co-author Heun Jin Lee. "An early embryo gastrulates, folding into a tube that ultimately becomes the digestive tract. You could imagine decorating the surface of an embryo with a coordinate system that stretches as the embryo folds."

The paper is titled "Motor-driven microtubule diffusion in a photobleached dynamical coordinate system." In addition to Hirokawa, Lee, Thomson, and Phillips, Caltech co-authors are former graduate student Rachel Banks (PhD '22), graduate student Ana Duarte, and postdoctoral scholar Bibi Najma. Funding was provided by the Maximizing Investigators Research Awards and the Foundational Questions Institute. Matt Thomson is an affiliated faculty member with the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience at Caltech.

Written by Lori Dajose

Source: Caltech/News


Saturday, June 14, 2025

Unusual stellar nurseries near our galaxy’s center puzzle scientists

Credit: These images are made from data from the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA), the Spitzer Space Telescope, and the Herschel Space Observatory. Image credit: J. De Buizer (SETI) / SOFIA / Spitzer / Herschel


New research led by Dr. James De Buizer at the SETI Institute and Dr. Wanggi Lim at IPAC at Caltech revealed surprising results about the rate at which high-mass stars form in the galactic center of the Milky Way. The researchers based their study primarily on observations from NASA’s now-retired SOFIA airborne observatory, and using data from the U.S. National Science Foundation Very Large Array archive, and focuses on three star-forming regions—Sgr B1, Sgr B2, and Sgr C—located at the heart of the galaxy.

This science was presented at the 246th American Astronomical Society Conference in Anchorage, Alaska on Monday, June 9, 2025, 2:15 PM AK. You can read the full release from SETI here.




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.


Friday, June 13, 2025

ALMA Reveals Lives of Planet-Forming Disks Press Releases ALMA Reveals Lives of Planet-Forming Disks

Artist’s concept of protoplanetary disk, like the thirty studied for the ALMA AGE-PRO survey. The lifetime of the gas within the disk determines the timescale for planetary growth. Credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/S.Dagnello

An artist’s illustration of gas disk evolution as revealed by the AGE-PRO program. The AGE-PRO program observed 30 protoplanetary disks around Sun-like stars to measure how the mass of gas disks changes with age. The top row illustrates the previously known trend: the fraction of young stars with disks declines over time. The AGE-PRO study, for the first time, shows that the median gas disk mass of the surviving disks also decreases with age. Disks younger than 1 Myr typically have several Jupiter masses of gas, but this drops rapidly to below 1 Jupiter mass in older systems. Interestingly, the surviving disks in the 1–3 Myr and 2–6 Myr age ranges appear to maintain similar median gas masses. Credit: Age-Pro collaboration, C. Agurto-Gangas



Observations of 30 disks reshape our understanding of how gas evolves in the birthplaces of planets

An international team of astronomers has unveiled groundbreaking findings about the disks of gas and dust surrounding nearby young stars using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). These results, published in 12 papers in a special issue of The Astrophysical Journal, are part of an ALMA Large Program known as AGE-PRO (ALMA Survey of Gas Evolution of PROtoplanetary Disks).

AGE-PRO observed 30 protoplanetary disks around Sun-like stars to measure gas disk masses at different stages of evolution. The study revealed that gas and dust in these disks evolve at different rates. “AGE-PRO provides the first systematic measurements of gas disk masses and sizes across the lifetime of planet-forming disks,” said Ke Zhang, Principal Investigator of the program from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

A protoplanetary disk surrounds its host star for several million years, during which time its gas and dust evolve and dissipate. This sets the timeline for the formation of giant planets. The initial mass, size, and angular momentum of the disk strongly influence the kind of planets that can form—whether gas giants, icy giants, or mini-Neptunes—and their potential migration paths.

ALMA’s unique sensitivity enabled the team to detect faint molecular lines, which allowed them to probe the cold gas within the disks. AGE-PRO targeted 30 disks of different ages, ranging from less than one million to over five million years old, located in three star-forming regions: Ophiuchus, Lupus, and Upper Scorpius. The survey captured key tracers of gas and dust masses, building a legacy dataset for studying the full lifecycle of planet-forming environments.

While carbon monoxide (CO) is the most widely used tracer in protoplanetary disks, AGE-PRO also employed the molecular ion N₂H⁺ to improve the accuracy of gas mass estimates. Additionally, ALMA’s sensitivity enabled the serendipitous detection of other molecular lines, including H₂CO, DCN, DCO⁺, N₂D⁺, and CH₃CN. “This is the first large-scale chemical survey of its kind, targeting 30 disks spanning a broad age range to characterize gas masses,” said John Carpenter, ALMA Observatory Scientist and co-lead of the program.

The findings reveal that gas and dust are consumed at different rates as disks age, with a distinct “swing” in the gas-to-dust mass ratio over time. Zhang explains, “The most surprising finding is that although most disks dissipate after a few million years, those that survive retain more gas than we expected. This fundamentally alters our understanding of how and when planets acquire their final atmospheres.”

Among the collaborators in AGE-PRO was a prominent Chilean team from the University of Chile, led by astrophysicist Laura Pérez, along with postdoctoral researchers Carolina Agurto and Aníbal Sierra, all of whom affiliated with the Center for Astrophysics and Associated Technologies (CATA). Pérez emphasized the value of the survey in providing a much-needed view of gas evolution: “Until now, most of what we knew about disk evolution was based on solids. With AGE-PRO, we finally have direct, consistent measurements of how the gas evolves throughout the disk’s lifetime—crucial for understanding how giant planets form.”

Carolina Agurto led the analysis of Upper Scorpius, a region known for hosting more evolved disks. Her work delivered critical insights into the final stages of these systems, showing that disks that persist longer contain significantly more gas than previously thought. Meanwhile, Aníbal Sierra focused on one of the brightest and oldest disks in the sample—2MASS J16120668-3010270—where he identified signs of two forming planets: one revealed by the surrounding dust and another inferred from gravitational perturbations. Follow-up observations with the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) are already being planned to directly detect exoplanets.

Several undergraduate and graduate students in Chile also contributed to AGE-PRO: Benjamín Cabrera, who worked on determining stellar masses; José Mondaca, who analyzed the youngest disks in Ophiuchus; and Camila Pulgarés, who focused on the evolutionary study of dust in all 30 disks.

“The advancement of science is a truly collaborative endeavor, driven by people from different countries and backgrounds, each contributing their unique perspective to push the boundaries of discovery,” said Ilaria Pascucci, co-Principal Investigator from the University of Arizona.

Additional Information

The original press release was published by the National Radio Astronomical Observatory (NRAO) of the U.S.A., an ALMA partner on behalf of North America.

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.




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Thursday, June 12, 2025

NASA's Roman to Peer Into Cosmic 'Lenses' to Better Define Dark Matter

This image shows a simulated observation from NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope with an overlay of its Wide Field Instrument’s field of view. More than 20 gravitational lenses, with examples shown at left and right, are expected to pop out in every one of Roman’s vast observations. A journal paper led by Bryce Wedig, a graduate student at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, estimates that of those Roman detects, about 500 from the telescope’s High-Latitude Wide-Area Survey will be suitable for dark matter studies. By examining such a large population of gravitational lenses, the researchers hope to learn a lot more about the mysterious nature of dark matter. Credits/Science: NASA, Bryce Wedig (Washington University in St. Louis), Tansu Daylan (Washington University in St. Louis). Image: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)



A funky effect Einstein predicted, known as gravitational lensing — when a foreground galaxy magnifies more distant galaxies behind it — will soon become common when NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope begins science operations in 2027 and produces vast surveys of the cosmos.

A particular subset of gravitational lenses, known as strong lenses, is the focus of a new paper published in the Astrophysical Journal led by Bryce Wedig, a graduate student at Washington University in St. Louis. The research team has calculated that over 160,000 gravitational lenses, including hundreds suitable for this study, are expected to pop up in Roman’s vast images. Each Roman image will be 200 times larger than infrared snapshots from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, and its upcoming “wealth” of lenses will vastly outpace the hundreds studied by Hubble to date.

Roman will conduct three core surveys, providing expansive views of the universe. This science team’s work is based on a previous version of Roman’s now fully defined High-Latitude Wide-Area Survey. The researchers are working on a follow-up paper that will align with the final survey’s specifications to fully support the research community.

“The current sample size of these objects from other telescopes is fairly small because we’re relying on two galaxies to be lined up nearly perfectly along our line of sight,” Wedig said. “Other telescopes are either limited to a smaller field of view or less precise observations, making gravitational lenses harder to detect.”

Gravitational lenses are made up of at least two cosmic objects. In some cases, a single foreground galaxy has enough mass to act like a lens, magnifying a galaxy that is almost perfectly behind it. Light from the background galaxy curves around the foreground galaxy along more than one path, appearing in observations as warped arcs and crescents. Of the 160,000 lensed galaxies Roman may identify, the team expects to narrow that down to about 500 that are suitable for studying the structure of dark matter at scales smaller than those galaxies.

“Roman will not only significantly increase our sample size — its sharp, high-resolution images will also allow us to discover gravitational lenses that appear smaller on the sky,” said Tansu Daylan, the principal investigator of the science team conducting this research program. Daylan is an assistant professor and a faculty fellow at the McDonnell Center for the Space Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis. “Ultimately, both the alignment and the brightness of the background galaxies need to meet a certain threshold so we can characterize the dark matter within the foreground galaxies.”

What Is Dark Matter?

Not all mass in galaxies is made up of objects we can see, like star clusters. A significant fraction of a galaxy’s mass is made up of dark matter, so called because it doesn’t emit, reflect, or absorb light. Dark matter does, however, possess mass, and like anything else with mass, it can cause gravitational lensing.

When the gravity of a foreground galaxy bends the path of a background galaxy’s light, its light is routed onto multiple paths. “This effect produces multiple images of the background galaxy that are magnified and distorted differently,” Daylan said. These “duplicates” are a huge advantage for researchers — they allow multiple measurements of the lensing galaxy’s mass distribution, ensuring that the resulting measurement is far more precise.

Roman’s 300-megapixel camera, known as its Wide Field Instrument, will allow researchers to accurately determine the bending of the background galaxies’ light by as little as 50 milliarcseconds, which is like measuring the diameter of a human hair from the distance of more than two and a half American football fields or soccer pitches.

The amount of gravitational lensing that the background light experiences depends on the intervening mass. Less massive clumps of dark matter cause smaller distortions. As a result, if researchers are able to measure tinier amounts of bending, they can detect and characterize smaller, less massive dark matter structures — the types of structures that gradually merged over time to build up the galaxies we see today.

With Roman, the team will accumulate overwhelming statistics about the size and structures of early galaxies. “Finding gravitational lenses and being able to detect clumps of dark matter in them is a game of tiny odds. With Roman, we can cast a wide net and expect to get lucky often,” Wedig said. “We won’t see dark matter in the images — it’s invisible — but we can measure its effects.”

“Ultimately, the question we’re trying to address is: What particle or particles constitute dark matter?” Daylan added. “While some properties of dark matter are known, we essentially have no idea what makes up dark matter. Roman will help us to distinguish how dark matter is distributed on small scales and, hence, its particle nature.”

Preparations Continue

Before Roman launches, the team will also search for more candidates in observations from ESA’s (the European Space Agency’s) Euclid mission and the upcoming ground-based Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, which will begin its full-scale operations in a few weeks. Once Roman’s infrared images are in hand, the researchers will combine them with complementary visible light images from Euclid, Rubin, and Hubble to maximize what’s known about these galaxies.

“We will push the limits of what we can observe, and use every gravitational lens we detect with Roman to pin down the particle nature of dark matter,” Daylan said.

The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is managed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, with participation by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California; Caltech/IPAC in Pasadena, California; the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore; and a science team comprising scientists from various research institutions. The primary industrial partners are BAE Systems, Inc. in Boulder, Colorado; L3Harris Technologies in Melbourne, Florida; and Teledyne Scientific & Imaging in Thousand Oaks, California.




About This Release

Credits:

Media Contact:

Claire Blome
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

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