Tuesday, June 16, 2026

NASA Webb Finds Strongest Evidence Yet for ‘Black Hole Stars’

While the primary purpose of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s observations of galaxy cluster Abell S1063 was to look for a certain population of stars, scientists obtained a detailed spectrum of GLIMPSE-17775 from the dataset. This little red dot is located behind Abell S1063. Credit Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, Vasily Kokorev (UT Austin); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured the deepest spectrum to date of a little red dot. More than 40 spectral lines have been discerned from the data, many of which independently support the theory that GLIMPSE-17775 is a black hole enshrouded by a hot, dense gas cocoon. Credit Illustration: NASA, ESA, CSA, Vasily Kokorev (UT Austin); Designer: Leah Hustak (STScI)



The complex puzzle known as little red dots has become more complete since their initial discovery by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in 2022. Now a particular little red dot’s spectrum is helping connect many of the pieces.

A team of astronomers led by Vasily Kokorev at the University of Texas at Austin identified the lucky dot in question: GLIMPSE-17775. By carefully analyzing the dot’s spectrum captured by Webb — the deepest spectrum to date of a little red dot — the research team has identified multiple lines of evidence, all of which support the interpretation that GLIMPSE-17775 is a supermassive black hole enveloped in a dense cocoon of partially ionized gas, a model referred to as the BH* (black hole star) scenario. A paper describing the results was published today in The Astrophysical Journal.

“I think part of the scientific community is converging on a singular picture — that little red dots can be explained by black hole star models. But none of the previous little red dots have all of the pieces of evidence in the same place,” said Kokorev, lead author of the study. “With GLIMPSE-17775 we can test these models because of how deep and amazing this source’s spectrum is.”

Connecting puzzle pieces

Soon after Webb first began science operations, it discovered a new, mysterious type of object in the very early universe – abundant red objects that emerged about 600 million years after the big bang. Scientists have explored multiple explanations for these little red dots, including the black hole star scenario.

A set of fortunate circumstances brought about this new, elaborate spectrum of a little red dot. The little red dot that would come to be known as GLIMPSE-17775 was fortunately included in Webb’s imaging and spectroscopy efforts for a project that sought to look for Population III stars and faint galaxies in galaxy cluster Abell S1063. This little red dot is more distant than the galaxy cluster and magnified by gravitational lensing. (GLIMPSE-17775 has a cosmological redshift of 3.5, meaning it existed about 1.8 billion years after the big bang.)

While Webb provided a 30-hour spectrum of the little red dot, the effect of gravitational lensing made it equivalent to 80 hours of telescope time. This combination of Webb’s infrared sensitivity and nature’s own “magnifying glass” amplified the amount of detail that could be gleaned from GLIMPSE-17775. The result was more than 40 spectral lines from this small, red source, which is the most detailed little red dot spectrum to date.

“When we saw the spectrum for the first time, it was like having all the pieces of a puzzle scattered on the floor,” said Kokorev. “We picked up each piece of the puzzle, measured the lines, and started combining the different pieces into a mosaic. Maybe a few pieces looked like nothing at first, but then a couple of them came together, and we realized that there was something there.”

The spectroscopic data collected by Webb contains multiple lines of evidence that support the interpretation that little red dot GLIMPSE-17775 is a black hole star: a rapidly accreting, or growing, black hole enveloped in a dense gas cocoon, which is reprocessing the light emitted from near the black hole and producing the features seen in the spectrum.

Lines of evidence

Among the 40-plus lines that the team detected in GLIMPSE-17775’s spectrum were various independent indicators that all align with the BH* scenario. For example, the team found that many of the spectral lines, such as hydrogen, oxygen, and helium, do not fit a simple model of a rotating gas cloud. Instead, the best fit model includes a broadening effect known as electron scattering, a telltale sign that a dense, layered gas cocoon is enshrouding this source.

The strength and ratios of certain lines to each other, most notably the 16 iron lines that compose what the team has dubbed an “iron forest” and certain oxygen lines, require a high-energy source to produce them, like a rapidly accreting black hole. Additionally, astronomers noted the fluorescence and absorption of helium in the spectrum, both of which individually suggest that there is a dense medium enveloping a powerful source.

The BH* scenario not only fits GLIMPSE-17775; it also accounts for why most little red dots are faint in X-rays, since any such emission is likely absorbed by the dense gas cocoon.

One missing element of the GLIMPSE-17775 puzzle piece is the part of the spectrum that would reveal what’s known as a Balmer break, or a strong dip in the emitted light that’s a signature characteristic of little red dots. To build a more comprehensive understanding of this little red dot, the team incorporated ancillary data from two observing programs that used NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope: the Frontier Fields and BUFFALO (Beyond Ultra-deep Frontier Fields And Legacy Observations) programs.

The Webb and Hubble data together help explain why the Balmer break is weaker than what typically is found in other little red dots: A giant host galaxy is surrounding GLIMPSE-17775. Although a little red dot’s host galaxy is not something that has been usually seen at such scale before, it isn’t inconsistent with the dense gas cocoon model. The black hole star model of little red dots attributes excess blue light to stars in the host galaxy.

When Webb first discovered little red dots, some researchers thought these objects had “broken cosmology,” unsure how galaxies could have grown so big so quickly in the early universe to account for all this light coming from their stars. However, the team believes the GLIMPSE-17775 puzzle piece fits nicely in the existing framework of the universe’s evolutionary history, because black hole masses don’t need to be as high in order to explain the broad emission lines.

“Everything fits, nothing is broken, and I think that makes the puzzle that is our universe even better,” said Kokorev. “Looking ahead, I’m eager to dive deeper and learn about what is powering the central engines of little red dots. While we think it’s a black hole, there are some other interesting theories being proposed, which is exciting. Maybe in a year or two, we’ll have the final answer to what powers these sources.”

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).




Details:

Last Updated: Jun 10, 2026

Location:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Contact Media:

Laura Betz
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland

laura.e.betz@nasa.gov

Abigail Major
Space Telescope Science Institute
Baltimore, Maryland


Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute
Baltimore, Maryland




Monday, June 15, 2026

Webb unveils young stars across every stage of formation

An area inside a star-forming molecular cloud. The background is covered with layers of gas and dust in blue, green and yellowish colours. Thicker clumps of cold dust, dark brown to black, block out light completely. Stars lie among and atop the clouds, from small orange ones to large white or blue ones. Waves and streams of glowing whitish gas are created by jets from protostars colliding with the surrounding material. Credit: ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, T. Megeath, M. Zamani (ESA/Webb) - Acknowledgement: M. H. Özsaraç



For this NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope Picture of the Month we return to the constellation Orion (the Hunter), a location familiar to Webb. This area of the sky is replete with star-forming clouds that make up a complex hundreds of light-years across. We find ourselves in the giant molecular cloud Orion A, of which the familiar Orion Nebula (also known as M42) is just a part; Webb has taken both close-up and wide-angle looks at M42 before.

The target of these observations, however, requires us to look behind the Orion Nebula. Behind the stars, gas and dust of M42 is a long, massive filament of cold gas and dust called (somewhat confusingly) the Orion Molecular Clouds, which is divided into four parts, OMC-1 through OMC-4. OMC-1 sits immediately behind M42, to the north are OMC-2 and OMC-3, and OMC-4 lies to the south.

This image shows just a small, northern portion of OMC-2, located 1280 light-years from Earth and a little north of the Orion Nebula. Every stage of star formation — from the youngest stellar embryos, to protoplanetary discs, to newly-minted pre-main sequence stars — is contained within just this scene, which stretches 150 light-years across. The intense star-forming activity has produced an impressive display of billowing outflows and sparkling stars atop swirling layers of gas and dark, obscuring clouds.

Molecular clouds such as OMC-2 are vast clumps of gas much more dense than the rest of interstellar space. This density allows complex molecules to form, protected from the radiation given off by other stars, and it means that gravity can cause the cloud to collapse and form stars. The earliest stage of this process is a protostar - a growing star that is being fed gas from the surrounding cloud through a spinning disc of gas. As gas falls onto the protostar, it heats up, powering the glow of the protostar. The immense amount of energy acquired during this process is unleashed in fierce jets of gas from the poles of the star, frequently seen as twin glowing outflows that mark the location of a protostar.

The abundance of protostars forming here in OMC-2 has created many spectacular outflows, large and small. Jets emitted from the young stars form high-speed shockwaves that sweep through the dense material around them; where the shockwaves are impacting the gas, it heats up and glows brightly, creating sharp ridges. Zoom in to observe the fine details in these shockwaves, as well as spot the smaller outflows from younger protostars. See if you can spot the location of hidden protostars, still so deeply obscured by their dusty cradles that they can’t be seen directly, by following outflows! Compare these very young protostars to the most evolved examples: the large, bright stars which have cleared away the clouds that surrounded them and now illuminate OMC-2.

Webb’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) was used to capture this view of OMC-2. The thick gas and dust in and around the Orion Nebula blocks any light coming from OMC-2 at visible wavelengths, and the clouds in OMC-2 itself obscure the protostars that astronomers really want to find. Only in the infrared do we see these protostars begin to shine out from their cocoons of dust. In many places, the cold dust is so dense that it absorbs all or almost all light, creating dark globules. Orange, brown and some of the red colours mark warmer dust that absorbs some light and emits some of its own. The yellow to green gradient is largely emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), while light from stars and protostars scattered by dust grains is seen here primarily as blue and cyan hazes. Gas heated by the outflows creates the detailed, glowing red ridges.

The data was collected in observing programme #5804, which aims to study the star formation in OMC-2 and its immediate neighbour, OMC-3. Since these molecular clouds are so near to Earth, they are excellent laboratories to learn about the earliest stages of stellar evolution. Astronomers will use the data from Webb to investigate how the many outflows affect star formation in the two regions, how the ultraviolet emission from the young stars impacts chemistry in the circumstellar discs which one day will form planets, and how gas and dust accretes onto the tens of protostars in the region.




Links


Sunday, June 14, 2026

What Powers the X-ray Emission from Distant Supermassive Black Holes?

An artist’s concept of a supermassive black hole surrounded by a swirling disk of material falling into it. The purpish ball of light above the black hole, a feature called the corona, contains highly energetic particles that generate X-ray light. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (IPAC).
Download Image



Supermassive black holes don't give off any light themselves, but at those times in their existence when they are actively accreting material, they are encircled by a disk of hot, glowing material. The gravity of a black hole pulls swirling gas in, heating that material and causing it to shine at energies ranging from the ultraviolet to X-rays depending on the mass of the black hole. Another major source of radiation near a black hole is the so-called “corona”. Coronae are made up of highly energetic particles that generate X-ray light, though details about their geometry, location, appearance, and how they form remain uncertain and are driving questions for X-ray astrophysicists. In the artist’s concept shown here, the corona is envisioned as a hot spot of energetic plasma above (and below) the black hole, though other models suggest the corona is a hot atmosphere to the inner accretion disk.

In a new study submitted to the Astrophysical Journal, an international team led by Dr. Xiurui Zhao of the California Institute of Technology systematically studied the X-ray coronae in some of the most distant and luminous accreting supermassive black holes ever observed. These coronae, composed of ultra-hot electrons, produce high-energy X-rays by boosting lower-energy light emitted by the accretion disk. The expansion of the universe then shifts these high-energy emitted photons to lower observed energies, similar to the Doppler shift we hear as an ambulance or police car speeds away from us and the tone of the siren shifts to lower notes. By targeting luminous accreting supermassive black holes in the distant universe, known as quasars, the team leveraged this cosmological shift to bring key spectral features into NuSTAR’s energy range. This enabled direct measurements of the coronal properties which had been out of reach of previous X-ray satellites.

By combining NuSTAR observations with observations by the European Space Agency-led XMM-Newton satellite, which is sensitive to lower energy X-rays, the team constructed the most comprehensive view to date of coronae in active galaxies across cosmic time. The results provide new constraints on how energy is dissipated and radiated near supermassive black holes, offering critical tests for state-of-the-art theoretical models and simulations.

The study reveals that coronae in these powerful, distant quasars are significantly cooler than those found in the nearby universe, where quasars are typically less luminous. This result suggests that the most luminous black holes operate in a fundamentally different physical regime. The findings also indicate that these distant coronae are denser and more efficiently cooled, likely due to intense radiation fields near rapidly accreting black holes. Together, these results challenge standard models of black hole coronae and point toward a more complex interplay between heating, cooling, and particle acceleration in these extreme environments.

In a related study to be presented at the 248th meeting of the American Astronomical Society later this month, Dr. Zhao and collaborators report on dramatic X-ray variability detected in the corona of the galaxy Mrk 509. Mrk 509 is a relatively nearby galaxy, just shy of 500 million light years away, that hosts an actively accreting supermassive black hole. This new work, relying on observations from the NuSTAR satellite, finds very strong variations in the temperature of the corona, at a level not previously found from either Mrk 509 or similar sources. Both the distant quasar survey and this detailed study of the nearby galaxy Mrk 509 have important implications for understanding the physical processes occurring very close to supermassive black holes.



Saturday, June 13, 2026

Galaxy Roasts Clouds, Makes "BBQ Sauce"

Figure: Schematic illustration of an evolutionary scenario connecting LRDs (left), BBQSORS (center), and ordinary QSOs (right). In LRDs, a supermassive black hole is thought to be surrounded by thick gas clouds. In BBQSORS, the surrounding clouds are being roasted off, and the region around the black hole may be partially emerging into view. In a QSO, the region around the black hole is visible. (Credit: Illustration generated by ChatGPT [OpenAI]; edited by Kohei Ichikawa)



Galaxies in the early Universe which shine brightly due to gas falling into a supermassive blackhole at the galaxy center were originally regarded as puzzling Quazi-Stellar Objects, abbreviated as QSO. Even though we now know that they are not stars, but entire galaxies, the abbreviation QSO, now pronounced as "quasar," is still used. QSOs are some of the brightest objects in the Universe, but the recipe nature uses to create them has remained a secret.

Now, thanks to data from the new wide-field multi-object spectrograph, ʻŌnohiʻula PFS, on the Subaru Telescope, astronomers think that they have discovered the special sauce needed to understand the secret recipe. The data comes from observations of an object known as "BBQSORS," which is an abbreviation for "Blackbody QSO and Radio Source," and is pronounced "barbecue sauce."

As the name implies, BBQSORS seems to be a QSO, but has some idiosyncrasies. It was originally identified as a radio-bright QSO candidate. Follow-up observations to determine the true nature of the candidate were conducted as part of ʻŌnohiʻula PFS’s filler observations program. Under this program, astronomers can request observations of an object when ʻŌnohiʻula PFS is scheduled to observe other targets in the same area of the sky. This filler observation program allows astronomers to make simultaneous observations, which use the instrument more efficiently without detracting from the main observations. The PFS observations revealed that BBQSORS shows the characteristic of high-speed gas around a black hole, but, unlike ordinary QSOs, also has features similar to black body emission from gas at around 10,000 degrees.

A research team including researchers from the Japanese institutions Tohoku University, Ehime University, and Ritsumeikan University analyzed data for BBQSORS from other observations and found that it has properties similar to those of a class of objects called "Little Red Dots" (LRDs). Researchers think that in LRDs, a growing supermassive black hole may be obscured by very dense clouds of gas which absorb the intense light from the center and re-emit it at different wavelengths. From this early "cloudy stage," LRDs are thought to change into QSOs.

BBQSORS seems to be shrouded in gas clouds, similar to LRDs, but the gas may be hotter than that surrounding LRDs. In other words, BBQSORS may be roasting off its surrounding clouds in the process of cooking up a QSR. If this interpretation is correct, BBQSORS is a valuable candidate object capturing the transition from a thick-gas-enshrouded stage to an ordinary quasar.

This research result was published on June 3, 2026, in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (Zhong, Chen, Ichikawa et al., "Blackbody Quasar and Radio Source (BBQSORS): A Candidate of Transitional Little Red Dots with a T ~ 104 K Blackbody Spectrum").

This research was supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant No. 25K01043), JST FOREST Program (JPMJFR2466), and the Inamori Foundation Research Grant.




Relevant Links



About the Subaru Telescope

The Subaru Telescope is a large optical-infrared telescope operated by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, National Institutes of Natural Sciences with the support of the MEXT Project to Promote Large Scientific Frontiers. We are honored and grateful for the opportunity of observing the Universe from Maunakea, which has cultural, historical, and natural significance in Hawai`i.


Friday, June 12, 2026

The new LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA catalog sets records in precision gravitational-wave astronomy

The spectrograms of all gravitational-wave events in the new catalog GWTC-5.0 that were found in O4b and have a false-alarm rate of less than one per year. Credit: Derek Davis / University of Rhode Island / LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA



To the point
  • New gravitational-wave catalog: The LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA collaboration releases the largest gravitational-wave catalog, GWTC-5, with 161 new events, totaling 390 confirmed detections since 2015.

  • A wealth of results: The catalog contains many astrophysical highlights: the gravitational-wave source with the most precise sky localization, the first measurement of three gravitational-wave tones from a black hole, evidence for the existence of second-generation black holes, and new measurements of how fast the Universe is expanding.

  • More results to come: Data from the last part of the fourth observing run are being analyzed at the moment. Information on the 68 signal candidates and new discoveries will be published in a catalog update in the coming months.



Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics contribute to discoveries in the largest gravitational-wave catalog ever compiled.

Today, the LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA (LVK) collaboration published an updated catalog of the gravitational-wave events observed by its international network of gravitational-wave detectors in the United States, Italy, and Japan. The new version of the catalog, called Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalogue-5.0 (GWTC-5), has been posted as three core and three companion papers on the arXiv preprint server. These will be submitted to The Astrophysical Journal and The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The detector network collected the data analyzed in this work between April 2024 and the end of January 2025, during O4b, the second part the fourth joined observing run (O4). A total of 161 new gravitational-wave events were discovered, of which scientists extracted parameters from 104. The latest revision of the catalog increases the grand total of confirmed events observed by the network since the first detection in September 2015 to 390.

As detector upgrades make the instruments increasingly more sensitive, the number of events detected in each successive observing run is growing significantly. This is underlined by the fact that 75% of all gravitational-wave signals observed so far have been discovered in the first and second part of O4.

An ever-growing treasure trove of data

“Our detectors have now become so sensitive that we discover new gravitational-wave signals about three to four times each week of our observing runs, unlocking an ever-growing treasure trove of data,” says Frank Ohme, group leader in the Precision Interferometry and Fundamental Interactions department at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute; AEI) in Hannover. “Each new signal helps to deepen our understanding of the dark, invisible side of the Universe.”

“Ten years after our first discoveries, we are now entering the era of precision gravitational-wave astronomy,” adds Karsten Danzmann, director emeritus at the AEI in Hannover. “What we can do with gravitational-wave astronomy today is truly amazing! We can study the population of coalescing black holes, conduct some of the most precise tests of general relativity, and obtain completely new measurements of the expansion of our Universe.”

“Our new catalog includes several exceptional and record-breaking signals,” says Alessandra Buonanno, director of the Astrophysical and Cosmological Relativity department at the AEI in the Potsdam Science Park. “We have found evidence for the existence of second-generation black holes, have pinpointed the sky position of a gravitational-wave source more precisely than ever before, and have for the first time measured or constrained three gravitational-wave tones from a black hole in the clearest gravitational-wave signal observed to date.” “The collaboration did an extraordinarily careful and comprehensive analysis of the detected gravitational waves,” confirms Harald Pfeiffer, group leader at AEI in Potsdam and the lead reviewer for the internal quality control of data-taking and analysis of the GWTC-5.0 results paper. “This makes today’s announcements not only scientifically extraordinarily important, but also very reliable.”

Pinpointing a black hole coalescence

One signal in the catalog, observed on 15 June 2024, sets a new record for the most precise sky localization of all gravitational-wave events. Its source was found to lie within an area of just 6 square degrees – a patch of the sky that could be covered by about 28 full moons. This exceptional performance was possible because LVK researchers could combine data from both LIGO instruments and the Virgo detector, which observed the gravitational waves.

Determining where a gravitational-wave source is located is crucial when searching for possible electromagnetic signals generated by events such as binary neutron star or black-hole–neutron-star coalescences. The smaller the sky region, the easier it is to point other astronomical observatories at them.

The record-setting event came from the coalescence of two black holes, weighing 34 and 26 times as much as our Sun, respectively. The gravitational waves were emitted from their merger about 3.4 billion years ago – at a time when the earliest known forms of life emerged on Earth – and traveled at the speed of light until reaching our planet in 2024.

Data analysis expertise and new waveform models

Whenever gravitational-wave signals reached Earth, an international expert team reviewed the performance of the algorithms that identified the potential signals and also discussed the next analysis steps. AEI members contributed week-long shifts of data analysis expertise during the observing run.

Gravitational-wave astronomy goes far beyond simply detecting a signal’s presence. Using highly sophisticated data analyses, it must be extracted it from the detectors’ background noise and its astrophysical properties must be inferred and understood. The clearer a signal stands out from the noise background, the “louder” it is and the better its astrophysics can be understood.

Extracting astrophysical properties from these loud signals requires a detailed understanding of the characteristic fingerprints these properties leave in the data. For this purpose, researchers at the AEI in Potsdam and Hannover have developed and made key contributions to the latest generation of improved waveform models. LVK researchers use these models to predict the gravitational waves emitted from binary black holes and to understand new signals once found.

“Our improved waveform models are more physically consistent and accurate and are key to reliably infer the properties of black hole mergers from the detector data,” explains Héctor Estellés Estrella, a former postdoc at AEI Potsdam, now a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute of Space Sciences in Barcelona.

“The additional physics incorporated by us into existing waveform models, now used in GWTC-5, brings us a step closer to precisely modeling these complex astrophysical systems,” adds Shrobana Ghosh a postdoc in the Precision Interferometry and Fundamental Interactions department at AEI Hannover.

Visualization of a binary black hole ringdown consistent with the gravitational-wave event GW250114.The gravitational waves are separated into two modes of the ringing remnant black hole, identified in the observation: the fundamental mode (green) and its first overtone (red). It also shows a predicted third tone (yellow) that the data places limits on. Visualization performed at the Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute), based on a numerical relativity simulation of the Simulating Extreme Spacetimes (SXS) Project. Credit: H. Pfeiffer, A. Buonanno (Max Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics), K. Mitman (Cornell University)

The clearest gravitational-wave signal

GWTC-5 contains five exceptionally loud binary black hole mergers including the by far clearest gravitational-wave signal seen to date. GW250114, reported earlier, came from a coalescence of black holes with masses 34 and 32 times that of our Sun about 1.3 billion light-years away. It was observed on 14 January 2025 and its “clarity” made it possible to achieve outstanding scientific results, among them the most precise test of general relativity ever performed and confirmation of Stephen Hawking’s black hole area theorem.

During the ringdown phase, when the black hole settles into its final state right after the merger, the gravitational-wave signal contains a characteristic spectrum of modes, or tones. Characterizing multiple gravitational-wave tones – measuring the frequencies of the tones and how quickly they fade – enables unique and powerful tests of general relativity. GW250114 was clear enough for the researchers to measure two tones and constrain a third. All three agree with Einstein’s general relativity and the Kerr solution for rotating black holes.

Characterizing black holes with DINGO

In the past years, researchers at the AEI and at the Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems (MPI-IS) have been developing DINGO, a machine learning algorithm for gravitational-wave data analysis. In the production of GWTC-5 it has been used routinely for the first time.

“Our approach called DINGO employs deep neural networks. It is just as accurate and reliable as the conventional methods the LVK collaboration uses to determine the astrophysical characteristics of the gravitational-wave sources, but it only takes minutes instead of hours or days for the same task,” explains Annalena Kofler, a PhD student at the MPI-IS and the AEI in Potsdam.

“The LVK investigated 104 of the 161 of the new gravitational-wave signals, in detail. For 42 of those 104 signals in the new catalog, DINGO served as a cross-validation tool. The DINGO results agree exactly with those obtained with the conventional methods,” adds Nihar Gupte, a PhD student in the Astrophysical and Cosmological Relativity department at the AEI in the Potsdam Science Park.

Infographic about the two gravitational-wave events GW241011 and GW241110.
Credit: Shanika Galaudage / Northwestern University / Adler Planetarium

Second-generation black holes

In October and November 2024, just one month apart, the detector network observed gravitational waves from two very special black hole coalescences. GW241011 and GW241110 came from distances of approximately 700 million and 2.4 billion light-years, respectively. As reported earlier, certain characteristics of these mergers – in particular how fast and around which axis the black holes were spinning – indicate the objects involved could be “second-generation” black holes. These are black holes that themselves were formed in previous black hole coalescences, likely in very dense and crowded cosmic environments, such as stellar clusters. There black holes are more likely to collide and merge repeatedly.

The growing number of observed events has also enabled the LVK researchers to study and identify the properties of different populations of black holes. One of the articles accompanying the catalog deals with this specific aspect.

Studying the expansion of our Universe

LVK researchers have used the improving ability of the detector network to localize events and the increased number of events to measure the rate at which our Universe is expanding. They combined gravitational-wave based measurements of the distances to the sources with other measurements of how fast they are traveling away from Earth because of the Universe’s expansion.

The LVK improved the precision of its estimate of the Hubble constant, which measures the Universe’s expansion rate, by more than 25% compared to the value derived from the previous catalog. The estimated value is consistent with existing measurements from both our cosmic neighborhood and the early Universe. It is, however, not yet precise enough to resolve the “Hubble Tension” between those long-established measurements.

More signals in the next catalog update and the upcoming observing run

The analysis of O4c, the final part of O4 from the end of January 2025 until mid November 2025, is currently underway. The LVK collaboration will publish the results in the coming months. The 68 signal candidates already identified during O4c will further expand the catalog and offer new opportunities to study our Universe and the fundamental laws of physics.

At the moment, the detectors of the international network are undergoing upgrades to improve their sensitivity towards the next six-month observing run, called IR1, beginning in late October or mid November of 2026. More sensitive instruments will help discovering gravitational-wave signals at an even higher rate – potentially uncovering additional rare cosmic events.




Contacts:

Dr. Benjamin Knispel
Press Officer AEI Hannover
Tel:
+49 511 762-19104
Email: benjamin.knispel@aei.mpg.de

Dr. Elke Müller
Press Officer AEI Potsdam, Scientific Coordinator
Tel:
+49 331 567-7303
Email: elke.mueller@aei.mpg.de



Scientific contacts:

Prof. Dr. Alessandra Buonanno
Director | LSC Principal Investigator
Tel:
+49 331 567-7220
Fax: +49 331 567-7298
Email:
alessandra.buonanno@aei.mpg.de
Homepage of Alessandra Buonanno

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Karsten Danzmann
Director Emeritus | LSC Principal Investigator
Tel:
+49 511 762-2356
Fax: +49 511 762-5861
Email:
karsten.danzmann@aei.mpg.de
Homepage of Karsten Danzmann

Dr. Frank Ohme
Research Group Leader | LSC Principal Investigator
Tel:
+49 511 762-17171
Fax: +49 511 762-2784
Email:
frank.ohme@aei.mpg.de
Homepage of Frank Ohme

Dr. Héctor Estellés
Research Scientist
Email:
hestelles@ice.csic.es
Institute of Space Sciences, Barcelona

Dr. Shrobana Ghosh
Postdoc
Tel:
+49 511 762-14659
Email: shrobana.ghosh@aei.mpg.de

Nihar Gupte
PhD Student
Tel:
+49 331 567-7169
Email: nihar.gupte@aei.mpg.de

Annalena Kofler
PhD Student / MPI for Intelligent Systems
Tel:
+49 331 567-7369
Email: annalena.kofler@tuebingen.mpg.de

Prof. Harald Pfeiffer
Group Leader
Tel:
+49 331 567-7328
Fax: +49 331 567-7298
Email: harald.pfeiffer@aei.mpg.de



Additional experts:

Dr. Angela Borchers Pascual
Postdoc
Tel: +49 511 762-17172
Email: angela.borchers.pascual@aei.mpg.de
Dr. Raffi Enficiaud
Research Software Engineer
Tel:
+49 331 567-7123
Email: raffi.enficiaud@aei.mpg.de

Cheng Foo
PhD Student
Tel:
+49 331 567-7241
Email: cheng.foo@aei.mpg.de

Jannik Mielke
PhD Student
Tel:
+49 511 762-14659
Email:jannik.mielke@aei.mpg.de

Dr. Gonzalo Morrás
Postdoc
Tel:
+49 331 567-7321
Email: gonzalo.morras@aei.mpg.de

Dr. Lorenzo Pompili
Research Fellow

Email: Lorenzo.Pompili@nottingham.ac.uk
University of Nottingham, School of Mathematical Sciences

Elise Sänger
PhD Student
Email: elise.saenger@aei.mpg.de



Core publications:

1.The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration

GWTC-5.0: An Introduction to Version 5.0 of the Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog
arXiv:2605.27223 (2026)


Source | DOI

2. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration

GWTC-5.0: Methods for Identifying and Characterizing Gravitational-wave Transients
arXiv:2605.27224 (2026)


Source | DOI

3. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration

GWTC-5.0: Observations from the Second Part of the Fourth LIGO-Virgo-KAGRA Observing Run and Updates to the Gravitational-Wave Transient Catalog
arXiv:2605.27225 (2026)

Source | DOI

4. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration

GWTC-5.0: Constraints on the Cosmic Expansion Rate and Modified Gravitational wave Propagation
arXiv:2605.27227 (2026)


Source | DOI

5. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration

Open Data from LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA through the Second Part of the Fourth Observing Run
arXiv:2605.27090 (2026)


Source | DOI

6. The LIGO Scientific Collaboration; the Virgo Collaboration; the KAGRA Collaboration
GWTC-5.0: Population Properties of Merging Compact Objects
arXiv:2605.27226 (2026)


Source | DOI


Thursday, June 11, 2026

Magnetic Field Helps Binary Star Systems Form

Visualization of gas flows around a binary protostar system calculated by ATERUI III. The gas shown in red orbits around one of the two protostars. The gas shown in blue orbits around the combined binary system. The gas shown in green is being expelled from the system and is carrying away angular momentum. The present research shows that the magnetic field plays an important role in expelling gas and angular momentum. (Credit: Matsumoto, Hotokezaka, Inayoshi 2026). Image (1.7MB)

Visualization of gas flows around a binary protostar system calculated by ATERUI III. The first half of the video shows a close-up view around the binary protostars. The second half shows a wide-field view of the system. You can see how the outflow escaping from the disk around the binary system carries angular momentum far away. (Credit: Matsumoto, Hotokezaka, Inayoshi 2026). YouTube video



New simulations show that interactions with a magnetic field can work to decrease the distance between still forming binary protostars. These results can help explain the characteristics of the binary star systems observed in the Milky Way. These results can also be extrapolated to binary black holes, giving insights into how super massive black holes evolve.

Stars form from clouds of interstellar gas that collapse into dense regions known as molecular cloud cores. Multiple stars form close together simultaneously, and in some cases two stars will become gravitationally bound to each other, forming a binary star system. Observations suggest that these binary systems form early on, before the stars are even fully formed. Astronomers have struggled to explain how these still forming “protostars” can pull together into binary systems so quickly.

New simulations using multiple supercomputers including the ATERUI III supercomputer for astronomical simulations and its predecessor ATERUI II, both at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, have shown that interactions between an interstellar magnetic field and the gas around the protostars can remove angular momentum from the protostar pair, allowing the binary systems to form within a realistic time period. In the simulation run with zero magnetic field performed as part of this research, the protostars actually moved farther apart, indicating the importance of the magnetic field in the process.

The simulations also suggest that the same process could work on massive binary black holes in the gas-rich heart of a new galaxy formed from the merger of two smaller galaxies. This would help explain how massive black holes can move close enough to merge and form a supermassive black hole. Direct simulation of massive binary black holes over the timespans required to spiral towards each other is still computationally challenging, so rigorous investigation of the effects of magnetic fields on massive binary black holes remains a topic for future investigation.




Detailed Article(s)

Magnetic Field Helps Binary Star Systems Form
Center for Computational Astrophysics

Release Information
Researcher(s) Involved in this Release

Tomoaki Matsumoto (Hosei University)
Kenta Hotokezaka (The University of Tokyo)
Kohei Inayoshi (Peking University)

Coordinated Release Organization(s)

National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, NINS
Hosei University

Paper(s)
Matsumoto, Tomoaki al. “Magnetic-field-induced inspiral of binaries with circumbinary disc: black hole and protostellar systems”, in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stag669


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

ALMA Finally Catches the Milky Way's Black Hole “Breathing”

This composite image overlays data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array and NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory. It shows evidence for a wind blowing away from Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), the supermassive black hole in the center of our galaxy. The white dot in the center of the image shows Sgr A*. In orange is data from ALMA radio telescopes in Chile, mapping the location of cold gas composed of carbon monoxide in the image. In blue is X-ray data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory. A large cone-shaped cavity, visible as an absence of cold gas in the ALMA data, is filled by hot X-ray-emitting gas in the Chandra data. Researchers think a hot, energetic wind blowing from Sgr A* created this,br structure by sweeping the cold gas away or heating it up. Image Credit: Northwestern Univ./M. Gorski; X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO; Radio: ESO/NAOJ/NRAO/ALMA




By creating the most detailed map ever of cold gas around Sagittarius A*, astronomers have provided compelling evidence for a long-sought black-hole wind

Astronomers using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have finally found clear evidence that the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, Sagittarius A*(Sgr A*), is blowing a hot cosmic wind – something scientists have been hunting for over 50 years. Astronomical theory says that when a black hole feeds on gas, it should also blow some material back out as winds or jets. Until now, the wind coming from our own Galaxy’s black hole had never been seen clearly. Using several years of highly detailed ALMA observations, astronomers mapped cold gas within just a few light‑years of Sgr A*. After carefully removing the black hole’s bright radio glow, they uncovered a giant, cone‑shaped hole in the cold gas, pointing straight at the black hole – the unmistakable imprint of a large, hot, active wind launched from Sgr A*.

With over five years of ALMA observations (made at a wavelength of 1.3 milimeters) astronomers mapped emission from carbon monoxide (CO) molecules, a classic tracer of cold molecular gas, within only about three light‑years of Sgr A*. By carefully modeling and subtracting the black hole’s own rapidly varying radio emission, they were able to reveal extremely faint, intricate structures in the surrounding gas. Data from NASA’s Chandra X-Ray Observatory show hot gas filling the same region, confirming that this is a black hole–powered outflow, not something caused by nearby stars.

The resulting map is roughly 100 times more sensitive and 80 times higher in angular resolution than previous CO maps of the region, making it the most sensitive, highest‑resolution map of cold gas within three light‑years of Sgr A* ever obtained. This discovery relied not only on years of ALMA observations but also innovative data‑processing techniques to model and subtract Sgr A*’s rapidly variable emission, revealing fainter structures in the surr,brounding gas.

The team estimates this wind has been blowing for at least 20,000 years, but it’s relatively gentle compared to the dramatic jets seen in other galaxies. By revealing this long‑sought wind, ALMA (and Chandra) have helped solve a decades‑old mystery and given scientists their clearest view yet of how a supermassive black hole can both feed on and reshape its surroundings at the heart of our Milky Way Galaxy.

Additional Information

The study appears as “The Discovery of a Large Active Wind from the Milky Way's Central Black Hole” by M. Gorsky and E. Murchikova in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

This article is based on the original press release by the U.S. National Science Foundation National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), 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 Scie,brnce and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Sci.ence Institute (KASI).
ALMA c.onstruction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Asso,brciated 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.




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

Seiichiro Naito
NAOJ EPO Lead
Email:
naito.seiichiro@nao.ac.jp

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


Tuesday, June 09, 2026

Journey to the centre of a galaxy cluster

A large spiral galaxy. It is seen tilted at an angle, so that it is foreshortened and appears very wide. Its tightly-wound, blue spiral arms swirl out from its glowing centre, spreading apart at the tips. They are followed by strands and clumps of dark red dust, and spotted with pink dots where stars are forming in clouds of gas. The galaxy is surrounded by a slight glow and lies on a dark background. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Thilker and the MAUVE-HST Team



The focus of today’s ESA/Hubble Picture of the Month is an active spiral galaxy on a journey lasting hundreds of millions of years. The galaxy Messier 88 (M88), which is also known as NGC 4501, is located about 63 million light-years away in the constellation Coma Berenices (Berenice’s Hair).

M88 is an active galaxy, which means that its centre harbours a supermassive black hole that is snacking on gas and dust. This black hole is estimated to be around 100 million times as massive as the Sun, and it appears to be powering outflows of gas from the galaxy’s centre.

Around this black hole is a population of old, reddish stars that give M88 its warmly glowing heart. Spreading out from the centre are several tightly wound, symmetrical spiral arms, each outlined by sparkling pink and blue star clusters and knotted clouds of dust. We see M88 from an angle so that it appears elongated, and its spiral arms delicately fan out before it.

M88 is a member of the Virgo Cluster, a collection of more than a thousand galaxies held together by gravity — and therefore linked by fate. As this massive group of galaxies moves through space, the galaxies themselves are in constant motion as they orbit the cluster’s centre of gravity. M88 itself is on a long and somewhat perilous cosmic journey that will bring it to the innermost reaches of the cluster.

As is the case with any epic journey, M88 will be fundamentally changed by its trek to the centre of the Virgo Cluster, about 2 million light-years from where it is today. In 200–300 million years, M88 will make its closest approach to Messier 87, the massive elliptical galaxy that anchors the entire cluster. As it draws close to this gravitational behemoth, M88 will experience intense ram pressure stripping. Ram pressure stripping is a process through which a galaxy’s gas is swept away as it pushes through the ever-present gas between the galaxies in a cluster.

Researchers have already seen this process at work in M88. The galaxy’s swirling disc of gas is truncated, and it appears to have been compressed on the leading edge of the galaxy, piling up like snow before a plough. In fact, M88 appears to have considerably less cold gas — the raw fuel for star formation — than expected for a galaxy of its size, especially in its outer regions. This is a clear sign that M88 will be altered by its journey, which will affect its ability to form stars and alter the course of its evolution.

Astronomers observed M88 with Hubble as part of an observing programme (#18103; PI: D. Thilker) dedicated to understanding the lives of spiral galaxies in crowded environments. This programme uses Hubble’s highly capable Wide Field Camera 3, which can finely resolve individual star clusters and nebulae in galaxies tens of millions of light-years away. By studying galaxies on these scales, astronomers can understand how a journey through a cluster impacts galaxies’ evolution and ability to form new stars.




Links


Monday, June 08, 2026

STScI Scientists Surprised to Find Brightness ‘Gap’ in Ancient Star Cluster

This Euclid image of globular cluster NGC 6397 is speckled with hundreds of thousands of stars, which vary in size and color. Most stars are located at the cluster’s center, where they are bound together by gravity. Scientists studying NGC 6397 found that when they grouped the cluster’s stars by brightness and color they observed a thin brightness “gap” of expected but missing low-mass stars called red dwarfs. This gap is thought to be linked to changes occurring within some stars’ interiors. This is the first time the gap feature was discovered in a globular cluster.Credits Image: ESA, NASA, Euclid Consortium - Image Processing: Jean-Charles Cuillandre (CEA-Saclay), Giovanni Anselmi (ESA)

This graph shows the brightness gap that scientists found using Euclid when they grouped the globular cluster NGC 6397’s stars by brightness and color. What they observed was a thin “gap” of expected but missing low-mass stars called red dwarfs. The observations fit well with their model prediction. This gap is thought to be linked to changes occurring within some stars’ interiors, giving astronomers a glimpse at processes happening inside stars even from thousands of light-years away. This is the first time the gap feature was discovered in a globular cluster. Credits Illustration: Massimo Griggio (STScI), Leah Hustak (STScI)



Scientists from the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, sought to study one stellar subject and ended up finding something even more exciting.

Using data from the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Euclid space telescope and NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, the team planned to analyze the motions of stars within an ancient collection of stars called a globular cluster. But what they found when they grouped the cluster’s stars by brightness and color as observed by Euclid was a thin “gap” of expected but missing low-mass stars called red dwarfs. This gap is thought to be linked to changes occurring within some stars’ interiors, giving astronomers a glimpse at processes happening inside stars even from thousands of light-years away.

This is the first time the gap feature was discovered in a globular cluster. “The discovery was serendipitous,” said STScI’s Andrea Bellini, one of the research paper’s primary authors. “We were not looking for the gap, but we found it.”

Understanding the Gap

The presence of this gap in relatively nearby stars was discovered in 2018 by scientists analyzing data from ESA’s Gaia observatory. That team plotted nearly 250,000 stars from the Gaia archive on a Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) diagram, one of the most important tools in stellar studies. This is the graph that astronomers use to classify stars and trace their life cycles.

On the HR diagram, stellar luminosities are plotted against their colors, which serve as a proxy for their temperatures. The positions of stars on the diagram reveal specific stellar evolutionary stages. Perhaps the most distinctive feature is the swath of main-sequence stars that cuts diagonally across the diagram.

As the precision and sensitivity of modern astronomy improves, astronomers can place stars more accurately on the plot. The Gaia data revealed a previously unknown feature — a narrow, diagonal slice of mostly missing stars through the main sequence in the middle of the red dwarf region.

So what causes this gap? It appears that in some red dwarf stars, fuel built up in their centers can trigger an energy burst that results in structural instability in a star’s interior. Between 0.34 and 0.36 times the mass of the Sun, red dwarfs undergo small variations that change their size, brightness, and temperature. Because only a small number of stars are undergoing these changes, there is a dearth of red dwarfs with these specific brightnesses. This is reflected in the HR diagram as a gap.

Enabling More Accurate Distance Estimates

In the Gaia case, stars were at a multitude of different distances and had varying ages, histories, and chemical compositions. In contrast, stars within a globular cluster share a common history, having formed in the same environment at roughly the same point in cosmic time.

“Globular clusters are the ideal laboratories to study stellar evolution and stellar populations,” said STScI’s Massimo Griggio, the principal author on the research paper. “In this globular cluster, the stars are basically at the same distance and have approximately the same age.”

The STScI team used Euclid to study NGC 6397, one of the closest globular clusters to Earth. Located approximately 8,000 light-years away in the southern constellation Ara, it contains hundreds of thousands of stars and is estimated to be 13.4 billion years old.

“Because we can determine the brightness where the gap is with very high precision and know for what stellar masses it occurs, we can use this information to estimate the cluster’s distance,” said STScI’s Russell Ryan, another of the primary researchers.

Gaia found the gap while viewing stars in the local neighborhood, which are typically younger than stars in globular clusters. Now, the Euclid team found the exact same process happening in more distant stellar interiors.

Hubble Tools Pave the Way for New Discoveries

This finding would not have been possible without the software and techniques originally developed at STScI for NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope over more than two decades. The team used these tools, which were pioneered primarily by STScI’s Jay Anderson, to make the high-precision measurements needed to detect this feature in the extremely crowded environment of a globular cluster. Though Hubble’s field of view is much, much smaller, when these tools were coupled with Euclid’s panoramic view, the gap clearly appeared.

“With these tools, we show that we can push the limits of Euclid, and in the future, the Roman Space Telescope, across a wide field of view,” said team member Mattia Libralato, formerly of STScI and currently with the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF) in Padova, Italy.  “Further investigations with Euclid and, in the future, Roman, will hopefully allow us to better characterize this feature also in other globular clusters.”

The team’s results published today in Astronomy & Astrophysics.

The Space Telescope Science Institute is expanding the frontiers of space astronomy by hosting the science operations center of the Hubble Space Telescope, the science and mission operations centers for the James Webb Space Telescope, and the science operations center for the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. STScI also houses the Barbara A. Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes (MAST) which is a NASA-funded project to support and provide to the astronomical community a variety of astronomical data archives, and is the data repository for the Hubble, Webb, Roman, Kepler, K2, TESS missions and more. STScI is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.




About This Release

Credits:

Media Contacts:

Ann Jenkins
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

Permissions:
Content Use Policy

Related Links and Documents

Euclid: Early Release Observations – Internal kinematics and the convective-transition gap of NGC 6397


Sunday, June 07, 2026

Spiral Galaxy NGC 4045

NGC 4045
Credit: NAOJ; Image provided by Masayuki Tanaka


The spiral galaxy NGC 4045, located in the Virgo constellation, displays two distinct spiral arms extending from its bright central nucleus to its outer regions. A faint blue spiral arm stretches to the right, indicating that stars are actively forming in the outer regions of this galaxy.Below NGC 4045 lies another galaxy, NGC 4045 A. Although it appears close enough to be gravitationally interacting with NGC 4045, it is actually a far more distant galaxy aligned along the same line of sight from Earth, and the two galaxies are not physically associated.



Is this Be star isolated?

Artists impression of “edge-on” view of a Be star with ioniozed gas disk.
Credit: NASA/ESA/G. Bacon (STScI)

Download Image

During the past week, NuSTAR observed CL Pismis 17 3, hitherto known as an isolated Be star, that shows suspiciously strong X-ray emission above 3 keV. This is part of a campaign to probe such anomalously X-ray bright Be stars for hidden accreting companions, like a neutron star, or possibly a white dwarf. The NuSTAR data is crucial to determine if the system is undergoing active mass transfer, as the hard X-ray spectrum is a reliable probe for Comptonised emission, as expected from an accreting neutron star. In such a case, the system would join a growing list of Be X-ray binaries, that are known to be accreting persistently at a stable lower luminosity, instead of being punctuated by very luminous outbursts as they typically exhibit. This not only allows us to sharpen constraints on the X-ray luminosity function of High Mass X-ray Binaries, which are crucial to understand our Galactic star formation history, but also provides us with a test case to study persistent but tenuous accretion mechanisms.

Author: Aafia Ansar Mohideen (Research Scientist, Dr. Karl Remeis Sternwarte Astronomical Institute, Germany)



Saturday, June 06, 2026

Red dwarf stars detected 'eating' Earth-like planets

This artist's impression shows two Earth-sized worlds passing in front of their parent red dwarf star in the TRAPPIST-1 system 40 light-years away. Credit: ESA/Hubble
Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

Astronomers have found some of the strongest evidence yet that stars can swallow their own planets.

A new study, published in Monthly Notices of the Astronomical Society, supports the long-held belief that young stars are capable of 'eating' nearby worlds as planetary systems form.

Researchers from Keele University and the University of Exeter studied thousands of stars and found evidence that six different red dwarfs – the smallest, coolest, and most common type of star in the universe – had engulfed Earth-like rocky planets.

What gave it away was the highly detectable chemical 'fingerprint', said lead author Professor Robin Jeffries, from Keele University.

"We found that a few of the red dwarf stars we studied contained lithium, a chemical element that should not be there," he explained.

"Therefore even a small amount of lithium stands out clearly in these stars – a bit like throwing paint onto a blank canvas."

Professor Jeffries added: "Red dwarfs are smaller and cooler than our Sun but inside they are extremely hot. This heat should destroy all of their fragile lithium in nuclear reactions shortly after they form."

Because of this, there have been previous predictions that finding the presence of lithium in their atmospheres could signpost the engulfment of still lithium-rich material accreted from a surrounding planetary system.

In the new study, the researchers looked at young star clusters using spectroscopic data, which refers to the study of how different matter interacts with electromagnetic radiation.

The Gaia-ESO Spectroscopic (GES) survey data covered thousands of stars, of which the team identified six different red dwarfs in three separate clusters which had much higher lithium content than other stars of a similar spectral type.

Their analysis suggests that these stars had dramatically ‘swallowed’ their surrounding Earth-like planets, or about 3 to 10 Earth-masses of planetary material in total, providing a fresh burst of lithium to their otherwise lithium-depleted atmospheres.

These engulfment events have long been theorised as a possible and even probable outcome during early planetary system formation, and may even have happened earlier in our own Solar System.

If this explanation proves correct, a new window will have been opened into the early lives of planetary systems, allowing the quantity and timing of planetary engulfment to be investigated.

Unlike isolated stars, those found in clusters have well-understood ages and masses, and the presence of many similar siblings, born from the same initial material, means even small chemical abundance differences are easier to establish, the researchers said.




Media contacts:

Sam Tonkin
Royal Astronomical Society
Mob: +44 (0)7802 877 700

press@ras.ac.uk



Science contacts:

Professor Robin Jeffries
Keele University

r.d.jeffries@keele.ac.uk



Images & captions

Red dwarf

Caption: This artist's impression shows two Earth-sized worlds passing in front of their parent red dwarf star in the TRAPPIST-1 system 40 light-years away.

Credit: ESA/Hubble



Further information

The paper ‘Lithium-rich M-dwarfs at the ZAMS: evidence for planetary engulfment?’ by Jeffries et al. has been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stag815.



Notes for editors

About the Royal Astronomical Society

The Royal Astronomical Society (RAS), founded in 1820, encourages and promotes the study of astronomy, solar-system science, geophysics and closely related branches of science.

The RAS organises scientific meetings, publishes international research journals, recognises outstanding achievements by the award of medals and prizes, maintains an extensive library, supports education through grants and outreach activities and represents UK astronomy nationally and internationally. Its more than 4,000 members (Fellows), a third based overseas, include scientific researchers in universities, observatories and laboratories as well as historians of astronomy and others.

The RAS accepts papers for its journals based on the principle of successful peer review, following which experts on the Editorial Boards accept the papers for publication. The Society issues press releases based on a similar principle, but the organisations and scientists concerned have overall responsibility for their content.

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Submitted by Sam Tonkin on Thu, 28/05/2026 - 12:58