At the center of our Milky Way galaxy is a black hole with a mass more than a million times the mass of the Sun, called Sgr A*. This has been directly confirmed by detailed radio imaging of material close to the black hole by the event horizon telescope as well as the motions of stars in the center of the galaxy effected by the gravitational pull of this supermassive black hole. The low luminosity of Sgr A* indicates that the system is in a relatively quiescent state compared to Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in other galaxies which may harbor more massive black holes. However, this has not always been the case, and evidence of higher luminosity in the past is indicated by the increasing X-ray brightness of giant molecular clouds near Sgr A*. Over the past four years observations by NuSTAR of regions close to the center of our galaxy have confirmed that X-ray emission from one of these clouds, called “The Bridge” has been increasing and is likely due to reflection of X-rays from a past Sgr A* outburst approximately 200 years ago. NuSTAR observations last week of The Bridge will add to the detailed investigation of the full profile of this Sgr A* illumination event. Characterizing past Sgr A* outbursts is a necessary step towards understanding the physical mechanisms that triggered major outbursts from a quiescent supermassive black hole, possibly similar to a tidal disruption event seen in other AGN. Observations of The Bridge will continue in 2027, for a proposal selected to be part of cycle 12 of the NuSTAR General Observer program.
Astronomy Cmarchesin
Releases from NASA, HubbleSite, Spitzer, ESO, ESA, NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, Royal Astronomical Society, Harvard-Smithsonian Center For Astrophysics, Max Planck Institute, Gemini Observatory, Subaru Telescope, W. M. Keck Observatory, JPL-Caltech, ICRAR, Webb Space Telescope, etc
Thursday, May 07, 2026
Milky Way supermassive black hole archeology
At the center of our Milky Way galaxy is a black hole with a mass more than a million times the mass of the Sun, called Sgr A*. This has been directly confirmed by detailed radio imaging of material close to the black hole by the event horizon telescope as well as the motions of stars in the center of the galaxy effected by the gravitational pull of this supermassive black hole. The low luminosity of Sgr A* indicates that the system is in a relatively quiescent state compared to Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) in other galaxies which may harbor more massive black holes. However, this has not always been the case, and evidence of higher luminosity in the past is indicated by the increasing X-ray brightness of giant molecular clouds near Sgr A*. Over the past four years observations by NuSTAR of regions close to the center of our galaxy have confirmed that X-ray emission from one of these clouds, called “The Bridge” has been increasing and is likely due to reflection of X-rays from a past Sgr A* outburst approximately 200 years ago. NuSTAR observations last week of The Bridge will add to the detailed investigation of the full profile of this Sgr A* illumination event. Characterizing past Sgr A* outbursts is a necessary step towards understanding the physical mechanisms that triggered major outbursts from a quiescent supermassive black hole, possibly similar to a tidal disruption event seen in other AGN. Observations of The Bridge will continue in 2027, for a proposal selected to be part of cycle 12 of the NuSTAR General Observer program.
Wednesday, May 06, 2026
Outer Solar System Object Has an Atmosphere But Shouldn’t
In the cold reaches of the outer Solar System lie thousands of small objects known as trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) because they lie outside the orbit of Neptune. A thin atmosphere has been observed around Pluto, the most famous TNO, but studies of other TNOs have yielded negative results. Most TNOs are so cold, and their surface gravity so weak, that they are not expected to retain atmospheres.
But astronomers like to expect the unexpected, so they took advantage of a lucky “natural experiment” to look for an atmosphere around a TNO known as (612533) 2002 XV93. This object, abbreviated as 2002 XV93, has a diameter of approximately 500 km. For reference, Pluto’s diameter is 2,377 km. The orbit of 2002 XV93 is such that, as seen from Japan, it passed directly in front of a star on January 10, 2024. As the star disappears behind 2002 XV93, it might gradually fade, indicating that the light is being attenuated as it passes through a thin atmosphere; or it might suddenly wink out as it slips behind the solid surface of the TNO.
A team of professional and amateur astronomers, led by Ko Arimatsu at NAOJ Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory, observed the star as 2002 XV93 passed in front of it from multiple sites in Japan. The obtained data are consistent with attenuation by an atmosphere.
Calculations show that the atmosphere found around 2002 XV93 is expected to last less than 1000 years unless it is replenished. So it must have been created or replenished recently. Observations by the James Webb Space Telescope show no signs of frozen gases on the surface of 2002 XV93 that might sublimate to form an atmosphere. One possibility is that some event brought frozen or liquid gases from deep inside the TNO to the surface. Another possibility is that a comet crashed into 2002 XV93, releasing gas that formed a temporary atmosphere. Further observations are needed to distinguish between these two scenarios.
Conceptual video showing how the light from a star changes when it passes behind an object with an atmosphere.
Credit: NAOJ
Release Information
Researcher(s) Involved in this Release
Ko Arimatsu (Ishigakijima Astronomical Observatory, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)
Jun-ichi Watanabe (Kyoto Sangyo University)
Coordinated Release Organization(s)
National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, NINS
Faculty of Science, The University of Tokyo
Kyoto University
Kyoto Sangyo University
Paper(s)
Ko Arimatsu et al. “Detection of an atmosphere on a trans-Neptunian object beyond Pluto”, in Nature Astronomy, DOI: 10.1038/s41550-026-02846-1
Tuesday, May 05, 2026
ALMA Reveals How Planet-Forming Disks Take Shape Press Releases ALMA Reveals How Planet-Forming Disks Take Shape
From chaos to order
Earlier theoretical models assumed the switch was sharp, almost instantaneous. The new study shows it isn't. Using numerical simulations with the FEOSAD code, the team tracked how a collapsing cloud core evolves into a star-disk system — and found that the transition unfolds gradually across a finite region, leaving a tell-tale signature: a characteristic "jump" in the distribution of specific angular momentum, a measure of how gas rotates as a function of its distance from the star.
"The existence of ENDTRANZ naturally results from the redistribution of mass and angular momentum during the formation of disks around young stars. This process ultimately governs how infalling material from the envelope, which rotates more slowly than the Keplerian speed, spreads out to form the disk and gradually settles into ordered Keplerian rotation," explained Das.
ALMA finds the fingerprint
"This ENDTRANZ tracer essentially manifests from the gradual transition in the rotational velocity, which offers a diagnostic framework for understanding the physical processes at play that drive the disk evolution," said Shantanu Basu, Interim Director of the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics and co-author of the study.
ALMA's extraordinary resolution was essential to making this detection possible, resolving the structure at the precise interface between the envelope and the disk — a regime that had previously been beyond reach.
"A careful inspection and comparison of the radial dependence of specific angular momentum between the observational data and the simulations helped identify the evidence of ENDTRANZ in L1527 IRS," said Nagayoshi Ohashi, principal investigator of the ALMA eDisk Large Program and co-author of the study.
A new window on planet formation
"In many ways, we believe this is just the beginning!" Das said.
Additional Information
This article is based on the original press release by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ), an ALMA partner on behalf of East Asia.
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan, and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).
ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of ALMA's construction, commissioning, and operation.
Contacts:
Nicolás Lira
Education and Public Outreach Officer
Joint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile
Phone: +56 2 2467 6519
Cel: +56 9 9445 7726
Email: nicolas.lira@alma.cl
Seiichiro Naito
NAOJ EPO Lead
Email: naito.seiichiro@nao.ac.jp
Jill Maluskyiv
NRAO
Phone: +1 304-456-2236
Email: jmalusky@nrao.edu
Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 3200 6670
Monday, May 04, 2026
Radiative Transfer Shapes Hydrogen Lines in Little Red Dots
Due to distinctive features in the spectra of the 'Little Red Dots', a new class of objects spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope, it was thought that these were distant galaxies with massive black holes at their centres. However, new research suggests that the light from these galaxies is shaped not only by the motion of gas near the central black hole, but also by the effects of radiation. MPA scientists have modelled three key processes – resonance, Raman, and Thomson scattering – and found that these, acting together, can explain the formation of hydrogen emission lines in the Little Red Dots.
Little Red Dots (LRDs) are among the most surprising discoveries of the James Webb Space Telescope. These compact, reddish sources appear in the early universe, within the first billion years of cosmic history, and exhibit unusual hydrogen spectra. Their light shows broad hydrogen emission lines, Balmer absorption features, and a pronounced break between ultraviolet and optical wavelengths. At first glance, these properties seem to point to active galactic nuclei, where broad hydrogen lines are typically interpreted as signatures of rapidly moving gas surrounding a supermassive black hole.
Yet this interpretation creates a major puzzle. If the widths of these hydrogen lines are directly interpreted as tracers of gas motion around a black hole, many Little Red Dots appear to host black holes that are unexpectedly massive compared to their young host galaxies. Such enormous black holes would challenge current ideas of how quickly black holes and galaxies could have formed and grown in the early universe. This tension raises an important question: do these spectral features truly provide a direct measure of black hole mass, or are they significantly shaped by the dense environments through which the radiation propagates?
This work explores a new possibility. Rather than assuming that hydrogen line widths primarily trace gas dynamics near a black hole, it investigates how radiative transfer through dense surrounding gas can fundamentally alter the observed spectrum. The presence of Balmer absorption and strong spectral breaks already hints that light in these systems may undergo substantial scattering and reprocessing. If so, some of the broad and complex hydrogen features in Little Red Dots may arise not only from fast-moving gas, but also from the way photons interact with thick, hydrogen-rich environments before escaping.
Understanding how radiative transfer shapes these spectral signatures therefore offers more than an alternative explanation for broad lines: it provides a new tool for probing the physical conditions, structure, and nature of Little Red Dots themselves, revealing how gas, radiation, and black hole growth interact in some of the earliest galaxies. Our focus is on three key processes:
- Resonance scattering, where photons interact with hydrogen atoms in the excited n=2 state.
- Raman scattering, where ultraviolet photons are converted into optical emission through inelastic scattering by atomic hydrogen.
- Thomson scattering, where photons scatter off free electrons. Each process contributes differently to the observed spectral features.
Notably, the radiative transfer of Hα and Hβ differs due to the atomic structure of hydrogen. While Hα photons predominantly remain in the same transition, Hβ photons can be converted into other lines, such as Paschen-α and Hα, through cascades involving the n=3 state. Consequently, Hβ photons are efficiently depleted in optically thick gas, while more Hα photons are produced. This leads to enhanced Hα emission and naturally increases the Hα/Hβ flux ratio beyond its intrinsic value.
Raman scattering: generating broad wings
Although broad emission lines are a defining feature of the Little Red Dots, such strong differences between lines are not always observed. This suggests that, although Raman scattering may contribute to the observed spectra, it is unlikely to be the dominant origin of the broad emission features. than those of Hβ.
© MPA
Thomson scattering: similar broad wings in hydrogen emission lines
The resulting profiles often exhibit exponential wings — a distinctive feature of electron scattering that has also been identified in other astrophysical environments. Importantly, this mechanism affects all emission lines in a similar way, which is consistent with the observed spectra. than those of Hβ.
Implications for interpreting the Little Red Dots
This has important consequences. If line widths are interpreted purely as indicators of gas motion, the mass of black holes may be significantly overestimated. Instead, the spectra of Little Red Dots encode the physical properties of their surrounding gas, such as density, temperature and ionisation state, through radiative processes.
These results provide a new framework for interpreting the spectra of Little Red Dots and similar systems in the early universe, offering a new perspective on early galaxy evolution. Rather than being straightforward indicators of black hole dynamics, hydrogen emission lines can reflect the complex interplay between radiation and dense gas.
Understanding this interplay is essential for correctly inferring the physical properties of galaxies and black holes at high redshifts and for developing a consistent model of their co-evolution during the first billion years of cosmic history. Current work focuses on analysing observed line profiles and using these models to decode the physical conditions imprinted in their shapes.
Source:
Contact:
Dr. Seok-Jun Chang
Chang, Seok-Jun
Postdoc
2245
sjchang@mpa-garching.mpg.de
Original Publication
Chang, Seok-Jun; Gronke, Max; Matthee, Jorryt; Mason, Charlotte
Impact of resonance, Raman, and Thomson scattering on hydrogen line formation in Little Red Dots
MNRAS, 545, 4, id.staf2131, 21 pp
Source | DOI
Sunday, May 03, 2026
A Black Hole’s Puzzling X-Ray Burs
Credit: Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Ansky Awakens
In 2024, Ansky entered a new phase of behavior, exhibiting a series of semi-regular X-ray flares called quasi-periodic eruptions. The leading explanations for these flares, which have been detected from several nearby galaxies, involve a star-sized object spiraling toward a supermassive black hole. The repeating X-ray flares arise when the object crashes through an accretion disk around the black hole, or when the object loses mass each time it passes closest to the black hole. In either scenario, the time between flares is expected to decrease over time — but as new work shows, Ansky is behaving in ways that fail to fit existing theories of quasi-periodic eruptions.
Soft X-ray observations of Ansky’s bursts from 2024 to 2026. These plots clearly show that in 2025 and 2026, the peak luminosities of the bursts have remained roughly constant while the time between bursts has increased. Click to enlarge. Credit: Chakraborty et al. 2026
An Unexpected Slowdown
This X-ray monitoring campaign spanned from January 2025 to January 2026 and captured 23 bursts, including 19 consecutive bursts — the most seen from a quasi-periodic eruption source to date. The bursts each lasted about three days, and the burst luminosity and total energy remained roughly constant, but the time between bursts increased smoothly from 9.9 days in January 2025 to 13.5 days in January 2026.
Possible Explanations
What physical process can produce X-ray bursts that are roughly consistent in energy and peak luminosity, last for approximately three days, and become more spaced out over time? The team considered five possibilities:
- 1. A star orbiting a black hole could transfer a bit of mass to the black hole each time it draws close… but it’s not clear whether the energy of each burst would remain the same as the star loses mass, nor is it clear how a three-day eruption duration could be achieved.
- 2. A star partially disrupted by a black hole could be kicked progressively farther from the black hole due to asymmetric mass loss or the reformation of its core… but this scenario cannot explain the bursts’ consistent energies and luminosities.
- 3. An object orbiting a black hole with an accretion disk could be experiencing general relativistic precession… but no combination of known sources of precession can reproduce Ansky’s behavior.
- 4. A second supermassive black hole could cause reflex motion of the inner black hole, changing how far the signal must travel… but even though this scenario can increase the time between bursts, the rate of increase is three orders of magnitude too small.
- 5. Instabilities in the black hole’s accretion disk could trigger recurrent bursts of accretion… but it’s not yet clear how an instability scenario could produce such predictable behavior.
By Kerry Hensley
Citation
Saturday, May 02, 2026
NASA Connects Little Red Dots With Chandra, Webb
A Tour of Connecting the Dots With NASA's Chandra and Webb - More Videos
- NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has found a “little red dot” (LRD) — a class of red, distant objects — that is giving off X-rays, unlike others observed so far.
- This suggests that this so-called X-ray dot represents a previously unseen phase of supermassive black holes in the early Universe.
- In the proposed scenario, gas surrounding the growing black hole becomes patchy as the black hole consumes it.
- Over time X-rays from material falling onto the black hole are then able to poke through, which Chandra can detect.
Shortly after NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope started its science observations, scientists reported a new class of unexplained objects. Astronomers found sources that were relatively small and red and located about 12 billion light-years from Earth or farther. (One reason for this redness is their great distances, causing their light to be shifted toward the part of the infrared spectrum with the longest wavelengths, which results in red colors in Webb images.) These became known as “little red dots” (LRDs), and since then astronomers have been trying to determine what exactly these LRDs are.
Recently, a team of researchers found one special object that could help, the X-ray dot depicted in this graphic. An optical and infrared composite image is centered on the position of the X-ray dot and shows its key features as an LRD – small and red. Optical light from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope is colored blue and green and infrared light from Hubble is colored orange and red. The Chandra X-ray image of the X-ray dot (purple) is in the inset, showing it is bright in X-rays.
The X-ray dot was discovered when comparing new data from Webb with a deep survey previously performed by Chandra. Up until then, all the other LRDs didn’t appear to emit X-rays. This was perplexing because if LRDs were early black holes, as many suspected they were, then they should commonly produce bright X-rays.
Therefore, it was significant to find an LRD that does. The researchers suggest that the X-ray dot could represent a transition phase from an LRD to a typical growing supermassive black hole. As the black hole in an LRD consumes gas surrounding it, patchy holes in the clouds of gas appear. This allows X-rays from material falling onto the black hole to poke through, which are observed by Chandra. Eventually all the gas is consumed, and the “black hole star” ceases to exist. A snapshot of this scenario is depicted in the artist’s illustration below.
The artist’s impression of the X-ray dot shows the research team’s understanding of this new object: a growing supermassive black hole at the center of a patchy sphere of gas.
Credit: NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Weiss; adapted by K. Arcand & J. Major
An alternate idea for the X-ray dot is that it is a more common type of growing supermassive black hole but is veiled in an exotic type of dust that astronomers have not seen before. Future observations are planned that should be able to shed light on the truth.
A paper describing these results has been published in The Astrophysical Journal with the lead author of Raphael Hviding (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany). A full list of authors can be found in the paper available at https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.09778
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.
Visual Description:
Shortly after NASA's James Webb Space Telescope started its observations, reports of a new class of curious objects emerged. Astronomers discovered small red specks more than about 12 billion light-years from Earth. These mysterious objects were given the accurate and descriptive name "little red dots," or LRDs.
One such dot sits at the heart of the primary image of this release. The composite optical and infrared image features a smattering of distant galaxies and other cosmic objects and phenomena in a variety of colors, set against the blackness of space. At the center of the square image is a small, somewhat pixelated, little red dot, outlined in a white box for clarity.
This curious, but inconspicuous, little dot is enlarged in an X-ray insert at our upper right, because it does something no other LRD has been found to do; it emits X-rays! In the insert, the dot appears as a much larger white sphere in the Chandra image, ringed with a neon purple glow. This exciting discovery has earned this little dot the nickname the "X-ray dot."
The X-ray dot is further enlarged in an artist's illustration. Many scientists think LRDs are supermassive black holes embedded in clouds of dense gas. Here, the dot is a round, patchy cloud of brilliant red gas. At its core is a relatively tiny black sphere, the black hole, floating in a swirling pool of pale purple mist. Research suggests that the X-ray dot represents a transition phase from an LRD to a typical growing supermassive black hole. As the black hole star consumes its surrounding gas, patchy holes appear in the cloud. This allows X-rays to poke through, which are then observed by Chandra.
Fast Facts for 3DHST-AEGIS-12014
Release Date: April 28, 2026
Scale: Image is about 20 arcsec (500,000 light-years) across.
Category: Quasars & Active Galaxies, Black Holes
Coordinates (J2000): RA 14h 20m 47.5s | Dec +53° 02´ 32.83"
Constellation: Ursa Major
Observation Dates: 29 Observations from Mar 2005 to Jun 2008
Observation Time: 214 hours 42 minutes (8 days 22 hours 42 minutes)
Obs. ID: 5845,5846, 6214, 6215, 9450-9453, 9720-9726, 9793-9797, 9842-9844, 9863, 9866, 9870, 9873, 9875, 9876
Instrument: ACIS
References: Hviding, R.E., et al., 2026, ApJL, 1000, L18.
Color Code: X-ray: purple; Optical/IR: red, orange, green, and blue
Distance Estimate: About 11.8 billion light-years from Earth (z~3.28)
Friday, May 01, 2026
ALMA Witnesses Star Birth Beyond the Milky Way
Highlights
.
- ALMA has enabled the first measurement of the core mass function in a galaxy beyond the Milky Way
- Observations of the Large Magellanic Cloud show that star-forming cores follow similar patterns to those in our Galaxy
- The results suggest that the earliest stages of star formation may be universal across different galactic environments
The study, led by the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics and published in Nature Communications, focuses on the 30 Dor-10 region in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a nearby galaxy located about 160,000 light-years from Earth. ALMA's combination of high sensitivity and angular resolution enables the resolution of the small-scale structure of star-forming regions even in nearby galaxies, opening a new window for studying the earliest stages of star formation beyond the Milky Way.
To achieve this result, the research team pushed ALMA to the limits of its capabilities for this type of study, reaching an angular resolution of 0.05 arcseconds—equivalent to distinguishing a one-euro coin from 100 kilometers away. This precision allowed them to resolve structures as small as 2,000 astronomical units, identifying 70 dense cores embedded within four protoclusters at a distance of 160,000 light-years. To confirm the nature of these structures and exclude contamination from ionized gas—a particular challenge in such active regions—the team combined ALMA observations with data from the Hubble Space Telescope and the James Webb Space Telescope, which also confirmed that the detected cores are still in an early phase of their evolution.
"We are truly excited about the results achieved with this study. Thanks to ALMA, studying core masses in our Galaxy is becoming almost 'routine,' suggesting in particular that the mass of our cores seems to evolve, especially in high-mass regions," says Alessio Traficante, lead author of the study. "Until now, no one had attempted to push this type of research into extra-galactic regions, which require significantly higher resolution and sensitivity than studies conducted within the Milky Way. The identification of more than 70 cores in 30Dor-10 was by no means guaranteed, considering we were observing an environment with an interstellar medium whose characteristics are profoundly different from those found in the main massive star-forming regions of our Galaxy. We had no idea what to expect before seeing the highly detailed images obtained by ALMA."
By comparing the mass distribution of these cores with those observed in the Milky Way, the researchers found that both follow a similar trend consistent with Salpeter's Law—a notable result given the markedly different conditions in the Large Magellanic Cloud, including lower metallicity, different turbulence regimes, and a more strongly ionized interstellar medium. Crucially, while the initial mass function of stars in such extreme environments can show an excess of massive stars, the earliest phase of core formation appears to follow the same patterns seen in our Galaxy, suggesting that these young cores continue to accrete mass over time regardless of their surroundings.
The findings suggest that the initial fragmentation of molecular clouds—the process that leads to the formation of dense cores—may be largely independent of the surrounding galactic environment. This work, connected to ALMA Large Programs such as ALMA-IMF and ALMAGAL, opens the door to a systematic study of star formation in other galaxies using techniques previously applied only within the Milky Way, and allows astronomers to begin testing whether the physical laws governing the birth of stars hold constant across the universe.
Additional Information
This article is an adaptation of the original press release by the Italian National Institute of Astrophysics (INAF).
The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan, and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).
ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of ALMA's construction, commissioning, and operation
Contacts:
Nicolás Lira
Education and Public Outreach Officer
oint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile
Phone: +56 2 2467 6519
Cel: +56 9 9445 7726
Email: nicolas.lira@alma.cl
Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 3200 6670
Email: press@eso.org
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
Thursday, April 30, 2026
NuSTAR and XRISM coordinate to investigate 3C390.3
Ingredients of an Active Galactic Nucleus
Credit: Rebull, IPAC, Caltech
Download Image
Last week, members of the NuSTAR Calibration Team hosted one of our semi-regular “calibration coffees” with the NuSTAR science user community. During this meeting the focus was on understanding the transition between “on-sky” science data and “occulted by the Earth” science data, specifically for bright X-ray sources. In addition, the NuSTAR team updated the science users on the continued monitoring of the science impact of the suspected tears in the MLI covers on both of the NuSTAR telescopes. The Calibration Coffee was attended by over twenty members of the science community and all of the calibration slides are now available to the large science community via the NuSTAR public GitHub pages.
Author: Elias Kammoun, Postdoctoral Scholar, Caltech
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Unraveling the Mass Mystery of Orion’s Young Stars
Lightweight Sun-like stars burn steadily for 10 billion years, while massive ones blaze briefly before exploding as supernovae in mere millions of years. Mass also determines what heavy elements they forge, such as carbon, oxygen, and iron, which form the building blocks of planets and life. In addition, it influences what types of planets can form around them.
Using the U.S. National Science Foundation Very Long Baseline Array (NSF VLBA), a network of radio telescopes spread across the United States that work together as one giant instrument, the team tracked the orbital motions of a sample of young binary star systems in Orion. Binary stars are pairs that orbit a shared center of mass, like dance partners spinning each other around. By watching these “dances” with extraordinary precision at radio wavelengths, researchers were able to calculate the stars’ true masses without relying on theoretical models. As lead researcher Dr. Sergio Abraham Dzib Quijano, from the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy explains, “Stellar mass is the most fundamental property of a star, yet it is notoriously difficult to measure for young, embedded systems.”
Young stars in Orion are shrouded in dense clouds of gas and dust, blocking visible and even infrared light from reaching most telescopes. The NSF VLBA overcomes this by observing at radio wavelengths (5 GHz), where dust is transparent and the array’s extreme resolution (sub-milliarcsecond) resolves tight binaries that blur together at other wavelengths.
The NSF VLBA can also detect motions on the sky smaller than the width of a human hair seen from thousands of kilometers away, showcasing the remarkable technical achievement behind these mass measurements. In practice, this means measuring tiny shifts in a star’s apparent position on the sky over months and years, using repeated observations to trace out its path. Each NSF VLBA radio telescope in the array records the incoming radio waves with exquisite timing. By combining the signals from antennas spread across the country from Hawaii to the Virgin Islands, astronomers can pinpoint a star’s position with milliarcsecond accuracy, far finer than what is possible with a single dish. By comparing how that position changes from epoch to epoch, they can see the subtle orbital motion caused by the gravity of a companion star and use that motion to infer the mass of each star in the system.
In the systems where the measured masses could be compared with standard models of young-star evolution, the results were mixed: some were reproduced well, while at least one showed a clear mismatch, suggesting that the models may still need refinement. The observations also uncovered previously hidden close companions and evidence that strong magnetic activity can persist in relatively massive young stars.
Young stars in Orion are the building blocks of future planetary systems, much like our own Solar System. “These accurate mass measurements now turn Orion into a precision laboratory for testing how young stars form and evolve,” says Dr. Jazmin Ordonez-Toro, postdoctoral Orquídeas fellow at the Astronomical Observatory at the University of Nariño, who co-led the study, “These measurements vastly expand our understanding of how stellar neighborhoods like our own are built.”
Press Contacts:
Melissa Weiss
Public Information and Multimedia Officer
Email | Phone
About NRAO
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
ALMA Reveals Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Formed in a Far Colder World Than Our Own
First-ever measurement of deuterated water in an interstellar object shows its home system formed under extreme conditions
New observations from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) have yielded the first-ever measurement of deuterated water — also known as semi-heavy water — in an interstellar object. The discovery reveals that the interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS contains at least 30 times the proportion of semi-heavy water found in comets from our own Solar System, providing a direct chemical window into the frigid conditions under which its home star system formed.
The research was led by PhD student Luis E. Salazar Manzano at the University of Michigan, working with assistant professor Teresa Paneque-Carreño, who served as Principal Investigator of the ALMA Director's Discretionary Time program that made these observations possible. The data were obtained with ALMA's Atacama Compact Array (ACA) just six days after 3I/ATLAS reached its closest point to the Sun — a narrow observing window made possible by ALMA's unique ability to point toward the solar direction, unlike most optical telescopes.
"Our new observations show that the conditions that led to the formation of our Solar System are much different from how planetary systems evolved in different parts of our Galaxy," said Salazar Manzano.
Comets are often nicknamed dirty snowballs, in part because of their high water content — water that carries frozen chemical records of the environment in which they formed. Alongside ordinary water (H₂O), comets contain a molecular variant called deuterated water (HDO), in which one hydrogen atom is replaced by deuterium, a hydrogen atom with an extra neutron. In Solar System comets, roughly one molecule of semi-heavy water exists for every ten thousand molecules of ordinary water. In 3I/ATLAS, that ratio is at least 30 times higher — and over 40 times the proportion found in Earth's oceans.
Notably, ordinary water (H₂O) itself fell below ALMA's detection threshold during these observations. The team constrained the D/H ratio indirectly, by detecting HDO directly and inferring the water production rate through the excitation of methanol lines — a sophisticated modeling approach that showcases ALMA's unique analytical capabilities.
This elevated ratio points to an origin in an exceptionally cold and chemically distinct environment. "The chemical processes that lead to the enhancement of deuterated water are really sensitive to temperature and usually require environments colder than about 30 Kelvin, or about minus 406 degrees Fahrenheit," explained Salazar Manzano. The ratio was set as the comet's home system formed and has been preserved intact throughout its interstellar journey.
ALMA's instrumental role in this discovery was essential. Paneque-Carreño noted: "Most instruments can't point toward the Sun, but radio telescopes like ALMA can. We were able to observe the comet within days after perihelion, just as it peeked out from its transit behind the Sun. This gave us a constraint on these molecules that's not possible using other instruments."
Beyond being a chemical fingerprint of a distant planetary system, the HDO/H₂O ratio carries a special cosmological significance: the abundances of deuterium and hydrogen were set during the Big Bang itself, making this measurement a uniquely fundamental probe of the conditions under which other worlds are born. "Each interstellar comet brings a little bit of its history, its fossils, from elsewhere. We don't know exactly where, but with instruments like ALMA we can begin to understand the conditions of that place and compare them to our own," said Paneque-Carreño.
Additional Information
The original press release was issued by the 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 Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan, and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI).
ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of ALMA's construction, commissioning, and operation.
Contacts:
Nicolás Lira
Education and Public Outreach Officer
Joint ALMA Observatory, Santiago - Chile
Cel: +56 9 9445 7726
Email: : nicolas.lira@alma.cl
Jill Malusky
Public Information Officer
NRAO
Phone: +1 304-456-2236
Email: jmalusky@nrao.edu
Bárbara Ferreira
ESO Media Manager
Garching bei München, Germany
Phone: +49 89 3200 6670
Email: press@eso.org
Seiichiro Naito
NAOJ EPO Lead
Email: naito.seiichiro@nao.ac.jp
Monday, April 27, 2026
New Curtin University-led research has used a radio telescope that spans the Earth to snap images that measure the immense power of jets from black holes, confirming scientists’ theories of how black holes help shape the structure of the Universe.
To record the measurement, researchers used an array of linked up telescopes separated by large distances to observe the black hole jets being buffeted by the winds of the star as the black hole moved around its orbit – much like how strong winds on Earth can push around water in a fountain.
By knowing the power of the wind and measuring how much the jets were bent, the researchers could determine the instantaneous power of the jets for the first time.
In addition, they were able to determine the speed of the black hole’s jets – about half the speed of light, or 150,000 km per second – another measurement that has challenged scientists for decades.
The research was led from the Curtin Institute of Radio Astronomy (CIRA) and the Curtin node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), in collaboration with the University of Oxford.
Lead author Dr Steve Prabu, who worked at CIRA at the time of the research and who is now based at the University of Oxford, said researchers were able to make the measurement using a sequence of images of the “dancing jets” – a term he used to describe the jets’ movement pattern as they were repeatedly deflected indifferent directions by the supergiant star’s powerful winds as the star and black hole moved around their orbits.
Dr Prabu said the measurement allowed scientists to understand what fraction of the energy released around black holes could be deposited into the surrounding environment, thereby changing the environment.
“A key finding from this research is that about 10 per cent of the energy released as matter falls in towards the black hole is carried away by the jets,” Dr Prabu said.
“This is what scientists usually assume in large-scale simulated models of the Universe, but it has been hard to confirm by observation until now.”
Co-author Professor James Miller-Jones, from CIRA and the Curtin node of ICRAR, said previous methodscould only measure the average jet power over thousands or even millions of years, preventing accurate comparisons with the X-ray energy released instantaneously from the infalling matter.
“And because our theories suggest that the physics around black holes is very similar, we can now use this measurement to anchor our understanding of jets, whether they are from black holes 10 or 10 million times the mass of the Sun,” Professor Miller-Jones said.
“With radio telescope projects such as the Square Kilometre Array Observatory currently under construction in Western Australia and South Africa, we expect to detect jets from black holes in millions of distant galaxies, and the anchor point provided by this new measurement will help calibrate their overall power output.
“Black hole jets provide an important source of feedback to the surrounding environment and are critical to understanding the evolution of galaxies.”
Other collaborating institutions included the University of Barcelona, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, the University of Lethbridge and the Institute of Space Science.
Sunday, April 26, 2026
A Possible GLIMPSE of the Universe’s First Stars
Title: GLIMPSE: An Ultrafaint ≃105 M⊙ Pop III Galaxy Candidate and First Constraints on the Pop III UV Luminosity Function at z ≃ 6–7
First Author’s Institution: University of Toronto; The University of Texas at Austin
Status: Published in ApJ
The first Pop III stars likely formed around 100 million years after the Big Bang in pristine pockets of hydrogen gas. Although these are too distant for us to observe, we expect that as the universe started to become metal enriched, there were still existing pockets of gas introverted enough to survive unpolluted and form metal-free Pop III stars up to a redshift of z ~ 6–7 (when the universe was around 900 million years old)!
JWST is the perfect instrument to search for these systems. You can read other astrobites on the search for possible Pop III systems with JWST here and here. The authors of today’s article seek to develop the most efficient way of using JWST’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) to find the galaxies hosting Pop III stars. Using their selection method on existing NIRCam data, the authors identified one promising Pop III galaxy candidate.
I’m Not Like Other Galaxies
The first selection method involves SED fitting. Astronomers create template SEDs that represent different types of galaxies and then compare these templates to the observed SEDs to see which one matches best. In this work, the authors use metal-rich galaxy templates and Pop III templates to fit the galaxies observed with NIRCam. They then calculate the chi-squared χ2 (a statistical measure of best fit) between the data and all the SED templates. A galaxy is selected as a Pop III candidate if the Pop III model provides a good fit (χ2 < 10) to the photometry and is significantly better than any metal-rich model. It’s kind of like looking for Cinderella by making every woman in the kingdom try on the glass slipper.
A color–color diagram plots the difference in magnitude between two filters on each axis. NIRCam filters are specially chosen to emphasize the SED characteristics above. When these filters are chosen, Pop III galaxies occupy a distinct region of this diagram as compared to metal-rich galaxies. For example, subtracting the F356W filter from the F277W filter is sensitive to the presence of the [O III] line and the Balmer jump. Figure 1 demonstrates how this color selection separates Pop III galaxies from typical galaxies.
O Pop III, Pop III, Wherefore Art Thou?
The GLIMPSE survey targeted a massive galaxy cluster, Abell S1063. The cluster bends the light from distant galaxies and, like a giant lens, magnifies faraway objects, providing some of the deepest JWST imaging to date. The Pop III candidate passes both tests: it resides in the Pop III region of the color–color diagram, and its SED is best fit by a Pop III model, not a metal-rich galaxy model (see Figure 2). Next, spectroscopic follow-up is needed to ensure that this galaxy is truly metal free and not just extremely metal poor.
The authors conclude that our best shot at identifying additional Pop III galaxy candidates is using NIRCam to image large numbers of gravitationally lensed clusters. Without magnification from gravitational lensing, it may be impossible to see these ultra-faint Pop III galaxies. Once candidates have been identified, they can be followed up with deep spectroscopy to confirm their redshift and their lack of metals. Who knows? With these new methods, we may soon get a glimpse of the universe’s very first stars.
Original astrobite edited by Chris Layden and Margaret Verrico.
About the author, Madison VanWyngarden:
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Astronomers Determine Brown Dwarf Age Using Tiny Stellar Pulsations
Generated with ChatGPT by the University of Hawaiʻi .
The study focused on the nearby system HR 7672, which includes a Sun-like star and a faint brown dwarf companion. Using Keck Observatory’s Keck Planet Finder (KPF), the team detected subtle oscillations in the star’s surface, ripples that revealed its age to be 2.3 billion years.
Because the brown dwarf formed alongside the star, this precise stellar age serves as a benchmark for the companion’s evolution, offering a rare chance to directly test theoretical models of brown dwarf cooling.
“The 18% age uncertainty establishes the HR7672 system as a valuable benchmark for years to come,” said Yaguang Li, lead author and researcher at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.
The study, led by the University of Hawaiʻi Institute for Astronomy, is published in The Astrophysical Journal.
A Two-Decade Scientific Arc
Using Keck Observatory’s Near-Infrared Camera (NIRC2) and the telescope’s Adaptive Optics system to correct for atmospheric blurring, Liu obtained a sharper image of the brown dwarf, which is 2,000 times fainter than its bright host star.
“Pioneering observations with Keck Observatory helped illuminate the so-called “brown dwarf desert,” the scarcity of such companions around Sun-like stars at close separations,” said Liu.
Now, more than two decades later, a new generation of Keck Observatory instrumentation continues to advance that legacy. Using ultra-precise measurements of the host star with the Keck Planet Finder (KPF) instrument, astronomers detected tiny stellar pulsations that reveal the star’s internal structure and age with unprecedented precision.
“The unique fast-readout mode of the Keck Planet Finder makes it the only instrument in the Northern Hemisphere capable of sampling oscillations on such short timescales,” added Li.
Testing How Brown Dwarfs Cool Over Time
Now, with this new and precise age measurement, combined with HR 7672B’s well-known luminosity and mass, the system becomes an exceptional “benchmark” for testing brown dwarf evolutionary models.
Comparing the observations with six different theoretical cooling models, the team found the best agreement with the most recent models that incorporate updated interior physics. Without the new data, the team would not have been able to distinguish this model from the five other possibilities.
These results demonstrate that high-precision stellar ages are essential for understanding substellar evolution — and show that precision spectroscopy with the next generation of observations will finally provide this information.
“Yaguang’s research has made this object even more valuable for our theoretical understanding of brown dwarfs,” said Liu.
As a next step, the researchers plan to generalize this method to a broader set of benchmark systems and test brown dwarf evolutionary models across different regimes.
Related Links
.
Media Contact:
Meagan O’Shea
moshea@keck.hawaii.edu























