Monday, April 20, 2026

DESI Completes Planned 3D Map of the Universe and Continues Exploring

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Zoomed-in portion of DESI’s year-five map

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Full DESI year-five map

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DESI year-five butterfly plot

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Kitt Peak National Observatory beneath the Milky Way

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Sunset over Kitt Peak National Observatory

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Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory

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Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory

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Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory

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Nicholas U.Mayall 4-meter Telescope Interior



Videos

Moving through DESI’s map
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Moving through DESI’s map

DESI map rotation
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DESI map rotation

DESI five-year map rotation
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DESI five-year map rotation

DESI map flythrough
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DESI map flythrough

DESI observations over five years (with constellations)
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DESI observations over five years (with constellations)

DESI observations over five years
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DESI observations over five years

Spacewatch all-sky with DESI pointings
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Spacewatch all-sky with DESI pointings

Nicholas U. Mayall Telescope Movement B-Roll
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Nicholas U. Mayall Telescope Movement B-Roll

DESI Observing Tiles
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DESI Observing Tiles

A small patch of DESI’s 5000 fiber-optic “eyes” at work
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A small patch of DESI’s 5000 fiber-optic “eyes” at work

DESI five-year map rotation (fulldome)
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DESI five-year map rotation (fulldome)



The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument, one of the most extensive surveys of the cosmos ever conducted, finished all observations for its originally planned 3D map of the Universe

DESI has mapped more than 47 million galaxies and quasars, creating the largest high-resolution 3D map of our Universe to date. Because of the instrument’s excellent performance and hints that dark energy might evolve, DESI will continue observations into 2028 and further expand the map. DESI was constructed with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science and is mounted on the U.S. National Science Foundation Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter telescope.

Last night, the 5000 fiber-optic eyes of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) swiveled onto a patch of sky near the Little Dipper. Roughly every 20 minutes, they locked onto distant pinpricks of light, gathering photons that had traveled toward Earth for billions of years. When the Sun rose, DESI collaborators marked the completion of a major milestone: successfully surveying all of the area in DESI’s planned map of the Universe.

The five-year survey, finished ahead of schedule and with vastly more data than expected, has produced the largest high-resolution 3D map of the Universe ever made. Researchers use that map to explore dark energy, the fundamental ingredient that makes up about 70% of our Universe and is driving its accelerating expansion.

DESI’s quest to understand dark energy is a global endeavor. The international experiment brings together the expertise of more than 900 researchers (including 300 PhD students) from over 70 institutions. The project is managed by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), and the instrument was constructed and is operated with funding from the DOE Office of Science. DESI is mounted on the U.S. National Science Foundation Nicholas U. Mayall 4-meter Telescope at NSF Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) in Arizona, a Program of NSF NOIRLab.

By comparing how galaxies clustered in the past with their distribution today, researchers can trace dark energy’s influence over 11 billion years of cosmic history. Surprising results using DESI’s first three years of data hinted that dark energy, once thought to be a “cosmological constant,” might be evolving over time. With the full set of five years of data, researchers will have significantly more information to test whether that hint disappears or grows. If confirmed, it would mark a major shift in how we think about our Universe and its potential fate, which hinges on the balance between matter and dark energy.

“It’s impossible to capture everything that went into making DESI such a successful experiment. From instrument builders and software engineers to technicians, observatory staff, and scientists — including many early-career researchers — it truly took a village,” says Stephanie Juneau, associate astronomer and NSF NOIRLab representative for DESI. “Ultimately, we are doing this for all humanity, to better understand our Universe and its eventual fate. After finding hints that dark energy might deviate from a constant, potentially altering that fate, this moment feels like sitting on the edge of my seat as we analyze the new map to see whether those hints will be confirmed. I’m also very intrigued by the many other discoveries that await in this new dataset.”

This visualization shows how DESI’s map of the Universe accumulated over five years. It begins with DESI’s tiles on the night sky and transitions to the 3D map. Earth is at the center of the wedges, and every dot is a galaxy. Credit: DESI collaboration and KPNO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/R. Proctor

“The Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument has truly exceeded all expectations, delivering an unprecedented 3D map of the Universe that will revolutionize our understanding of dark energy,” says Kathy Turner, Program Manager for the Cosmic Frontier in the Office of High Energy Physics at the Department of Energy. “From its inception, we envisioned a project that would push the boundaries of cosmology, and to see it come to such a spectacularly successful completion for its initial survey, ahead of schedule and with such rich data, is incredibly rewarding. The dedication and ingenuity of the entire DESI collaboration have made this world-leading science a reality, and I am immensely proud of the groundbreaking results we are already seeing and the discoveries yet to come as we continue to explore the mysteries of our cosmos.”

“DESI’s five-year survey has been spectacularly successful,” says Michael Levi, DESI director and a scientist at Berkeley Lab. “The instrument performed better than anticipated. The results have been incredibly exciting. And the size and scope of the map, and how quickly we’ve been able to execute, is phenomenal. We’re going to celebrate completion of the original survey and then get started on the work of churning through the data, because we’re all curious about what new surprises are waiting for us.”

DESI has now measured cosmological data for six times as many galaxies and quasars as all previous measurements combined. The collaboration will immediately begin processing the completed dataset, with the first dark energy results from the full five-year survey expected in 2027. In the meantime, DESI collaborators continue to analyze the survey’s first three years of data, refining dark energy measurements and producing additional results on the structure and evolution of the Universe, with several papers planned later this year.

DESI began collecting data in May 2021. Since then, the instrument has far surpassed the collaboration’s original goals. The plan was to capture light from 34 million galaxies and quasars (extremely distant yet bright objects with black holes at their cores) over the five-year sky survey. DESI instead observed more than 47 million galaxies and quasars, as well as 20 million stars.

The project’s success is even more impressive in light of several challenges. DESI is a complicated machine with thousands of parts to maintain. In 2020, final tests of the instrument were interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2022, the Contreras Fire swept over Kitt Peak but, through the efforts of firefighters and staff, did not damage the telescope. Recovery efforts were slowed by monsoons and mudslides.

ESI will continue observations through 2028 and grow its map by about 20%, from 14,000 square degrees to 17,000 square degrees. (For comparison, the Moon covers approximately 0.2 square degrees, and the full sky has over 41,000 square degrees). The extended map will cover parts of the sky that are more challenging to observe: areas that are closer to the plane of the Milky Way, where bright nearby stars can make it harder to see more distant objects, or further to the south, where the telescope must account for peering through more of Earth’s atmosphere.

The experiment will also revisit the existing area of the map to collect data from a new set of galaxies: more distant, fainter “luminous red galaxies.” These will provide an even denser, more detailed map of the regions DESI has already covered, giving researchers a clearer picture of the Universe’s history.

Researchers will also study nearby dwarf galaxies and stellar streams, bands of stars torn from smaller galaxies by the Milky Way’s gravity. The hope is to better understand dark matter, the invisible form of matter that accounts for most of the mass in the Universe but has never been directly detected.




More information

DESI is supported by the DOE Office of Science and by the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, a DOE Office of Science national user facility. Additional support for DESI is provided by the U.S. National Science Foundation; the Science and Technology Facilities Council of the United Kingdom; the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation; the Heising-Simons Foundation; the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (CEA); the Secretariat of Science, Humanities, Technology and Innovation (SECIHTI) of Mexico; the Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain; and by the DESI member institutions.

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) is committed to groundbreaking research focused on discovery science and solutions for abundant and reliable energy supplies. The lab’s expertise spans materials, chemistry, physics, biology, earth and environmental science, mathematics, and computing. Researchers from around the world rely on the lab’s world-class scientific facilities for their own pioneering research. Founded in 1931 on the belief that the biggest problems are best addressed by teams, Berkeley Lab and its scientists have been recognized with 17 Nobel Prizes. Berkeley Lab is a multiprogram national laboratory managed by the University of California for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science.

DOE’s Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit energy.gov/science.

NSF NOIRLab, the U.S. National Science Foundation center for ground-based optical-infrared astronomy, operates the International Gemini Observatory (a facility of NSF, NRC–Canada, ANID–Chile, MCTIC–Brazil, MINCyT–Argentina, and KASI–Republic of Korea), NSF Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO), NSF Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO), the Community Science and Data Center (CSDC), and NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory (in cooperation with DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory). It is managed by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with NSF and is headquartered in Tucson, Arizona.

The scientific community is honored to have the opportunity to conduct astronomical research on I’oligam Du’ag (Kitt Peak) in Arizona, on Maunakea in Hawai‘i, and on Cerro Tololo and Cerro Pachón in Chile. We recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence of I’oligam Du’ag to the Tohono O’odham Nation, and Maunakea to the Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) community.



Links


Contacts:

Stephanie Juneau
Associate Astronomer
NSF NOIRLab
Email:
stephanie.juneau@noirlab.edu

Will Percival
DESI Collaboration spokesperson
University of Waterloo
Email:
will.percival@uwaterloo.ca

Josie Fenske
Public Information Officer
NSF NOIRLab
Email:
josie.fenske@noirlab.edu

Lauren Biron
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Science Communication and Media Relations Specialist
Email:
LBiron@lbl.gov


Sunday, April 19, 2026

‘Interstellar Glaciers’: NASA’s SPHEREx Maps Vast Galactic Ice Regions

These observations made by NASA’s SPHEREx mission reveal vast frozen complexes in the Cygnus X star-forming region of the Milky Way galaxy. Water ice, shown as bright blue structures at left, exactly overlays the dark lanes of interstellar dust, shown in different wavelengths at right. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/IPAC/Hora et al. Full Image Details



The water, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide ices are attached to the surface of tiny dust particles in clouds spanning hundreds of light-years across.

NASA’s SPHEREx (Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer) mission has mapped interstellar ice at an unprecedented scale. Covering regions in our Milky Way galaxy more than 600 light-years across, the ice was found inside giant molecular clouds — vast regions of gas and dust where dense clumps of matter collapse under gravity, giving birth to stars. A study describing these findings published Wednesday in The Astrophysical Journal.

One of SPHEREx’s main goals is to map the chemical signatures of various types of interstellar ice. This ice includes molecules like water, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide, which are vital to the chemistry that allows life to develop. Researchers believe these ice reservoirs, attached to the surfaces of tiny dust grains, are where most of the universe’s water is formed and stored. The water in Earth’s oceans — and the ices in comets and on other planets and moons in our galaxy — originates from these regions.

“These vast frozen complexes are like ‘interstellar glaciers’ that could deliver a massive water supply to new solar systems that will be born in the region,” said study coauthor Phil Korngut, the instrument scientist for SPHEREx at Caltech in Pasadena, California. “It’s a profound idea that we are looking at a map of material that could rain on nascent planets and potentially support future life.”

Thanks to its spectral capabilities, SPHEREx can measure the amounts of various ices and molecules, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, in and around molecular clouds, helping scientists better understand their composition and environment.

Although space telescopes such as NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope and the agency’s retired Spitzer have detected water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and other icy molecules throughout our galaxy, the SPHEREx observatory is the first infrared mission specifically designed to find such molecules over the entire sky via the mission’s large-scale spectral survey.

“We expected to detect these ices in front of individual bright stars: The light from a star acts like a spotlight, revealing any ice in the space between us and that star. But this is something different,” said lead author Joseph Hora, an astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics (CfA) at Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “When looking along the galactic plane — where most of the stars, gas, and dust of our galaxy are concentrated — there’s a lot of diffuse background light shining through entire dust clouds, and SPHEREx can see the spatial distribution of the ices they contain in incredible detail.”

Managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, the SPHEREx observatory launched March 11, 2025, and has the unique ability to see the sky in 102 colors, each representing a different wavelength of infrared light that offers distinctive information about galaxies, stars, planet-forming regions, and other cosmic features. By late 2025, SPHEREx had completed the first of four all-sky infrared maps of the universe, charting the positions of hundreds of millions of galaxies in 3D to help answer major questions about the cosmos, including those about the origins of water and life.

Icy origins

Using the SPHEREx maps of various icy molecules, the study’s authors were able to look deep into many molecular clouds in the Cygnus X and North American Nebula regions of the Milky Way. In the densest areas, where the amount of dust is greatest, dark filamentary lanes block the visible light from the stars behind. With its infrared eye, the space telescope also revealed where the different ices — which absorb specific wavelengths of infrared light that would pass through the clouds if they consisted only of dust — are at their densest.

This finding supports the hypothesis that interstellar ice forms on the surface of tiny dust particles, which are no larger than particles found in candle smoke, and that the dense regions of dust shield the ices from the intense ultraviolet radiation emitted by newborn stars. However, not all ices are treated the same way in the interstellar medium.

“We can investigate the environmental factors that contribute to different ice formation rates across large areas of interstellar space,” said study coauthor Gary Melnick, also an astronomer at the CfA. “The SPHEREx mission’s ‘big picture’ view provides valuable new information you can’t get when zooming in on a small region.”

Within this broad perspective, adds Melnick, SPHEREx can do something ground-based observatories cannot: detect varying amounts of water and carbon dioxide, two ices that respond differently to environmental factors. For example, the presence of intense ultraviolet light from nearby massive young stars or the heating of these dust grains by that light affects the abundances of different ices in distinct ways.

This is just the beginning for the mission. Observations from SPHEREx will provide scientists with a powerful tool to explore the various components of our galaxy, the physics of the interstellar medium that lead to star and planet formation, and the chemical processes that deliver molecules essential for life to newly formed planets. More about SPHEREx

More about SPHEREx

The mission is managed by JPL for the agency’s Astrophysics Division within the Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The telescope and the spacecraft bus were built by BAE Systems in Boulder, Colorado. The science analysis of the SPHEREx data is being conducted by a team of scientists at 13 institutions across the U.S. and in South Korea and Taiwan, led by Principal Investigator Jamie Bock, who is based at Caltech with a joint JPL appointment, and by JPL Project Scientist Olivier Doré. Data is processed and archived at IPAC at Caltech in Pasadena, which manages JPL for NASA. The SPHEREx dataset is freely available to scientists and the public.

For more information about the SPHEREx mission visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/spherex/




News Media Contact:

Ian J. O’Neill
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-2649

ian.j.oneill@jpl.nasa.gov

Alise Fisher
NASA Headquarters, Washington
202-358-2546

alise.m.fisher@nasa.gov

Amy C. Oliver, FRAS
Public Affairs Officer

amy.oliver@cfa.harvard.edu
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory


Saturday, April 18, 2026

Tracing the Origins of Mysterious Gas Clouds near the Galactic Center

The picture shows the dynamic environment around the supermassive black hole at the Milky Way's center, featuring the newly discovered gas cloud G2t alongside previously known clouds G1 and G2, whose similar orbits suggest a common origin from the star system IRS16SW. © ESO/D. Ribeiro for the MPE GC team

The integration team after successfully mounting ERIS to the Cassegrain focus of UT4 at the VLT. Adhering to the restrictions associated with pandemic, both for travel and while at the observatory, make the whole process of integration and testing much more arduous than in normal times. © MPE/ESO/ERIS



New observations and simulations by a team of researchers led by MPE reveal that a massive binary star near our Galaxy’s center is responsible for creating a series enigmatic gas clouds — compact gas clumps that help feed the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*.

The center of our Milky Way is a remarkably dense and dynamic region. At its heart lies the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*), surrounded by stars, gas, and dust moving under extreme gravitational forces. These surroundings provide a natural laboratory for studying how matter behaves close to a black hole and how such objects are supplied with new material.

Over the last twenty years, astronomers have discovered several compact gas clouds near Sgr A* using infrared observations. These “clumps” are important clues to understanding how gas may eventually reach the black hole. Yet their exact origin and the physical processes that shape them have remained uncertain.

The G‑Clouds: A Growing Family

In 2012, astronomers identified a first, compact, ionized gas cloud named G2. It has a mass of a few Earths and emits light from hydrogen and helium, typical for hot, dusty gas. G2 follows an elongated orbit around Sgr A* and shows a faint trailing structure, G2t. Revisiting earlier observations revealed shortly after a similar object, G1, moving along a comparable orbit.

G1, G2, and G2t were proposed to be denser clumps within a common stream of gas. Moderate density fluctuations can lead to a clumpy appearance because a cloud’s brightness increases with the square of its density. Recently, researchers found that gas from G2’s tail has condensed into a third compact clump moving along a similar path, which one now could call G3, except that this name had by now already been given to a different object. Together, these objects form a coherent structure — the G1–2–3 streamer— tracing material that flows through the Galactic Center.

Calculations show that the infall of one such clump, roughly one Earth mass every decade, could provide enough material to sustain Sgr A*’s current activity. Understanding how these clumps form is therefore key to explaining how the black hole is fuelled.

Searching for the Source

Several origins have been proposed: stellar winds from massive stars, explosive events such as novae, or tidal stripping by Sgr A*. To test these ideas, an international team led by MPE used adaptive-optics-assisted spectrographs SINFONI and ERIS, which enable sharp infrared spectroscopy. Focusing on the hydrogen Brackett‑γ emission line, they reconstructed the orbits of the three clouds from their positions and velocities.

The analysis revealed that G1, G2, and G2t travel on orbits with almost identical orientation and shape. The chance that three unrelated objects share such specific orbital parameters is vanishingly small. This indicates a common origin for all three clumps.

A Binary Star as the Creator

By tracing the motions of the gas streamer backward in space and radial velocity, the researchers identified a viable source: the massive contact binary star IRS 16SW, located in the clockwise disk of young stars orbiting Sgr A*. The small differences between the G‑cloud orbits can be explained by the binary’s own orbital motion.

Hydrodynamical simulations further support this conclusion. They show that gas clumps can form where the stellar winds from the binary collide with the surrounding medium, producing a shock between the two stars. There, gas accumulates and becomes compressed, eventually detaching as individual clumps that travel inward — like what is observed in the G1–2–3 streamer.

What does it mean?

These findings suggest that stellar winds from massive stars in the Galactic Center can continually supply material to the black hole. The result connects stellar evolution, gas dynamics, and black‑hole feeding into one consistent picture — showing how star formation and black‑hole growth may be linked even in our own Galaxy.




Contacts:

Dr. Stefan Gillessen
Scientist Infrared-Group
Tel.:
+49 89 30000-3839
Email: Stefan.gillessen@mpe.mpg.de
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching

Prof. Dr. Frank Eisenhauer
Direktor der Infrarot-Gruppe am MPE
Tel.:
+49 89 30000-3100
Fax.: +49 89 30000-3102
Email:
eisenhau@mpe.mpg.de
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching

Prof. Dr. Reinhard Genzel
Direktor der Infrarot-Gruppe am MPE
Tel.:
+49 89 30000-3280
Fax.: +49 89 30000-3601
Email:
genzel@mpe.mpg.de
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching




Original Publication

S. Gillessen, F. Eisenhauer, J. Cuadra, R. Genzel, et al.
The gas streamer G1–2–3 in the Galactic center
A&A, 707 (2026) A79


Source | DOI



Further Information

Series: Paper of the Month

The series “Paper of the month” features a scientific highlight of MPE researchers.


 

Sharper infrared eyes for the VLT: ERIS sees first light

November 23, 2022

The Enhanced Resolution Imager and Spectrograph (ERIS), a science instrument which was built by a consortium under the leadership of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, has successfully completed its first test observations. One of them exposed the heart of the galaxy NGC 1097 in mesmerising detail.





A look deep into the early universe: First infrared interferometry of a quasar at redshift 4

September 17, 2025

New GRAVITY+ and ERIS observations uncover surprising black hole properties and powerful gas outflows in the early cosmos. 

 

 


Hyper-luminous, Yet Surprisingly Organized

July 15, 2024

Members of the Infrared Group at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE), including Daizhong Liu and Natascha M. Förster Schreiber, and other international institutes, showed that a Hyper-luminous Infrared Galaxy (HyLIRG) can also arise in a massive turbulent rotating disk within a single galaxy, where the gas is organized in a structured way, rather than by collisions of several galaxies. 
 
 
 
 



Friday, April 17, 2026

NASA’s Webb Redefines Dividing Line Between Planets, Stars

Astronomers used NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope to directly image 29 Cygni b, which weighs 15 times Jupiter. They found evidence for heavy chemical elements like carbon and oxygen, which strongly suggests it formed like a planet by accretion within a protoplanetary disk. Credit Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, William Balmer (JHU, STScI), Laurent Pueyo (STScI); Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)
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Exoplanet 29 Cygni b, seen in this artist’s concept, is a gas giant weighing about 15 times the mass of Jupiter. Astronomers studied 29 Cygni b with NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. They determined that it likely formed from accretion rather than disk fragmentation. Credit Illustration: NASA, ESA, CSA, Joseph Olmsted (STScI)



Planets, like those in our solar system, form in a bottom-up process where small bits of rock and ice clump together and grow larger over time. But the heftier the planet, the harder it is to explain its formation that way.

Astronomers used NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope to examine 29 Cygni b, an object about 15 times as massive as Jupiter orbiting a nearby star. They found multiple lines of evidence that 29 Cygni b indeed formed from this bottom-up process, bringing new insights into how the heftiest planets come to be. A paper describing these findings published Tuesday in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The planet formation process is broadly understood to occur within gigantic disks of gas and dust around stars through a process called accretion. Dust gloms together into pebbles, which collide and grow larger and larger, forming protoplanets and eventually planets. The largest then collect gas to become giants like Jupiter. Since it takes more time for gas giants to form, and the disk of planet-forming material eventually evaporates and disappears, planetary systems end up with many more small planets than large planets.

In contrast, stars form when a vast cloud of gas fragments and each piece collapses under its own gravity, growing smaller and denser. A similar fragmentation process could theoretically occur within protoplanetary disks as well. That could explain why some very massive objects are found billions of miles from their host stars, in regions where the protoplanetary disk should have been too tenuous for accretion to occur.

29 Cygni b sits on the dividing line between what can be explained by these two different mechanisms. It weighs 15 times Jupiter and orbits its star at an average distance of 1.5 billion miles (2.4 billion kilometers), about the same as Uranus in our solar system. The research team targeted it because it could potentially result from either process.

“In computer models, it’s very easy for fragmentation in a disk to run away to much higher masses than 29 Cygni b. This is the lowest mass you could plausibly get. But at the same time, it’s about the highest mass you could get from accretion,” said lead author William Balmer of the Johns Hopkins University and the Space Telescope Science Institute, both in Baltimore.

Balmer’s observing program used Webb’s NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) in its coronagraphic mode to directly image 29 Cygni b. This planet was the first of four objects targeted by the program, all of which are known to weigh between 1 and 15 times as much as Jupiter. The team also required their targets to orbit within about 9 billion miles (15 billion kilometers) of their stars.

The planets were all young and still hot from their formation, ranging in temperature from about 1,000 to 1,900 degrees Fahrenheit (530 to 1,000 degrees Celsius). This would ensure their atmospheric chemistry was similar to the planets of HR 8799, whose system Balmer studied previously.

By choosing appropriate filters, the team was able to look for signs of light being absorbed by carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide (CO), which allowed them to determine the amount of those heavier chemical elements, which astronomers collectively call metals.

They found strong evidence that 29 Cygni b is enriched in metals relative to its host star, which is similar to our Sun in its composition. Given the planet’s mass, the amount of heavy elements it contains is equivalent to about 150 Earths. This suggests that it accreted large amounts of metal-enriched solids from a protoplanetary disk.

The team also used a ground-based optical telescope array called CHARA (Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy) to determine if the planet’s orbit is aligned with the spin of the star. They confirmed that alignment, which would be expected for an object that formed from a protoplanetary disk.

“We were able to update the planet’s orbit, and also observed the host star to determine its orientation with respect to that orbit,” said Ash Messier, co-author and a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University. “We showed that the inclination of the planet is well-aligned with the spin axis of the star, which is similar to what we see for the planets of our solar system.”

“Put together, this evidence strongly suggests that 29 Cygni b formed within a protoplanetary disk through rapid accretion of metal-rich material, rather than through gas fragmentation,” said Balmer. “In other words, it formed like a planet and not like a star.”

As the team gathers data on the other three targets within their program, they plan to look for evidence of compositional differences between the lower-mass and higher-mass planets. This should provide additional insights into their formation mechanisms.

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: Apr 14, 2026
Location:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Contact Media:

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

laura.e.betz@nasa.gov

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute
Baltimore, Maryland



Thursday, April 16, 2026

Most Close Pairs of Stars Are Born as Cosmic Twins

An artist's rendition of pair of twin stars being born in the HOPS-312 system in Orion.
Credit: NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/B. Saxton.
Hi-Res File



New research from ALMA suggests disk fragmentation may form close-companion protostellar systems

A new study of infant stars in the Perseus and Orion star-forming regions suggests that most close pairs of stars are born as twins in the same disk, rather than drifting together later from larger distances. By watching powerful streams of gas blasting away from baby stars, a team of researchers has shown that most close pairs of stars likely form side‑by‑side in the same spinning disk of gas and dust.

Many stars in our galaxy don’t live alone like the Sun. Roughly half of Sun-like stars are part of a pair or even a small family of stars that orbit each other. Young stars are even more likely to have companions, which tells astronomers that forming in multiples is a normal part of how stars are born.

What hasn’t been clear is how close pairs of stars—separated by only a few times the width of our solar system—actually come together. Do they form together in the same disk of gas and dust, or do they start far apart and slowly move closer over time?

This new research, led by undergraduate student Ryan Sponzilli of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, tests two leading ideas for how close-companion protostars form:

1. A single, massive disk of gas and dust around a newborn star becomes unstable and breaks into two or more clumps, each collapsing to form a star. This disk fragmentation tends to produce close pairs in an organized, aligned configuration.

2. Turbulence in a larger cloud core causes it to break into widely separated clumps that form stars far apart, which are later pulled inward through complex gravitational interactions. This process of turbulent fragmentation and migration should leave stellar spins and orbits in more random orientations.

“Figuring out which process is more common in the formation of these ‘twins’ will help us understand more about not only stars, but also what kinds of planetary systems might form around them,” shares Sponzilli.

To test these ideas, the research team studied 51 very young protostellar star systems that host close companion stars in the Perseus and Orion molecular clouds, some of the nearest stellar nurseries to Earth. ALMA observations mapped both the dust surrounding the stars and jets of molecular gas blasting away from them.

In 38 of the systems, fast, narrow streams of outflowing gas were clearly observed. These outflows show which way the system is spinning. The outflows usually shoot out at right angles to the disk of material around each star, so their direction is a good guide to how the system is oriented in space.

The researchers compared the direction of each outflow to the line connecting the two stars in a pair. This let them work out whether the system looked organized, as expected if the stars formed together in a disk, or more random, as expected if they formed separately and later moved closer.

The team also built simple computer models of what they should see in the sky for each of the two formation scenarios. When they compared these models to their 42 outflow measurements, the real data matched best with a picture where the outflows tend to line up at right angles to the line between the stars, which is expected if the stars formed together in a single disk.

“The results point to disk fragmentation as the main way that close pairs of baby stars form, at least in the young regions studied here,” adds co-author Leslie Looney, Sponzilli’s professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.

By showing that many close stellar twins are likely born together in a single spinning disk, this study strengthens the link between the earliest stages of star formation and the later evolution of planetary systems around multiple stars. Understanding these early alignments will help astronomers predict how common aligned planetary orbits might be in binary systems and how stable those planetary systems can become over time.




About NRAO

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

About ALMA

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

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


Wednesday, April 15, 2026

See and hear galaxies evolve from the dawn of the universe

The panel on the left shows the so-called cosmic web, where the colour encodes the projected density of gas and stars. The two panels on the right zoom into two of the many galaxies formed in the simulations. These images show the stellar light obscured by dust for a disc galaxy seen face-on (top right) and another disc galaxy seen edge-on (bottom right). Credit: Schaye et al. (2026)
Licence type: Attribution (CC BY 4.0)

The most realistic picture yet of how galaxies formed and then evolved from the beginning of time has been revealed in a suite of new and unique audiovisual simulations.)

This data, published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, shows that the standard cosmological model can successfully explain the observed growth of galaxies, from the first billion years after the Big Bang to the present day, when key physics is included.

Unlike earlier simulations, the COLIBRE 'virtual universes' model the cold gas and cosmic dust inside galaxies – the raw materials from which stars form and which strongly affect how galaxies look in telescopes.

By including these previously missing ingredients and using far more computing power than ever before, the simulations successfully reproduce real galaxies, both in the present-day universe and in the early universe as seen by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).

"Much of the gas inside real galaxies is cold and dusty, but most previous large simulations had to ignore this," said project leader Professor Joop Schaye, of Leiden University. "With COLIBRE, we finally bring these essential components into the picture."


The results show that our standard model of the universe can explain galaxy formation more accurately than previously thought, while also opening up powerful new ways to compare theory with observations and to explore a virtual universe through visuals, sound, and interactive tools.

Digital cold gas and dust grains

According to the international team of researchers, their COLIBRE simulations break new ground in several ways. Earlier simulations artificially prevented gas inside galaxies from cooling below about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit – hotter than the surface of the Sun – because modelling colder gas was too complex. Yet, observations show that stars form in cold gas. COLIBRE includes the additional physical and chemical processes needed to model this cold interstellar gas directly.

COLIBRE also simulates small dust grains, which can greatly influence galactic gas. These solid particles can help hydrogen molecules to form, which dominate the cold gas content of galaxies. The dust also shields gas from harsh ultraviolet radiation and strongly affects how galaxies appear in telescopes. Dust absorbs ultraviolet and optical light from stars and re-emits it in the infrared, shaping many astronomical observations. By modelling dust directly, COLIBRE opens new ways to compare simulations with real data.

Thanks to advances in algorithms and supercomputing, COLIBRE uses up to 20 times more resolution elements than earlier simulations, allowing larger volumes to be simulated in greater detail and with better statistics.

A new laboratory

COLIBRE demonstrates that realistic treatments of cold gas, dust, and outflows driven by stars and black holes are crucial for understanding galaxy evolution, the researchers say. It provides a powerful new laboratory for testing theories, interpreting observations, and creating "virtual observations" to check how astronomers analyse real data.

The findings also show that the standard cosmological model remains consistent with observations of galaxy evolution, including some that were thought to be challenging, such as the masses of galaxies in the early universe.

"Some early JWST results were thought to challenge the standard cosmological model," said Dr Evgenii Chaikin, of Leiden University, lead author of several accompanying COLIBRE papers and co-author of the main study.

"COLIBRE shows that, once key physical processes are represented more realistically, the model is consistent with what we see."

Still, not everything has been explained yet. The enigmatic 'Little Red Dots' discovered by JWST, possibly the seeds of supermassive black holes, are not predicted by COLIBRE, which assumes such seeds already exist. Modelling their formation will require even higher resolution simulations and new physics, pointing the way for future work.

The simulations were run using the SWIFT simulation code on the COSMA8 supercomputer at the Institute for Computational Cosmology at Durham University, which is hosted on behalf of the DiRAC national facility in the UK. The largest simulation required 72 million CPU hours, and the full model took nearly 10 years to develop by an international team spanning Europe, Australia, and the United States.

Carlos Frenk, Ogden Professor of Fundamental Physics at the Institute for Computational at Durham University, and a core member of the COLIBRE team said: "It is exhilarating to see 'galaxies' come out of our computer that look indistinguishable from the real thing and share many of the properties that astronomers measure in real data such as their number, luminosities, colours and sizes.

"I like to tease my observer colleagues by asking 'which galaxy catalogue do you think these images came from?'"
He added: “What is most remarkable is that we are able to produce this synthetic universe purely by solving the relevant equations of physics in the expanding universe.”

The scientists point out that it will take years to analyse the data that has already been produced. Most simulations were completed in 2025, although some of the simulations with the highest resolution are still running and are expected to finish after the summer.

A universe you can see and hear

Beyond traditional data products, the team has developed new ways to explore the simulations. This includes "sonified videos", where sound encodes additional physical information, as well as interactive maps that allow users to explore the virtual universes.

"We're excited not just about the science, but also about creating new ways to explore it," said Dr James Trayford, of the University of Portsmouth, who led the development of COLIBRE's dust model and the sonification of its visualisations.

"These tools could provide new insights, make our field more accessible, and help us build intuition for how galaxies grow and evolve."




Media contacts:

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

press@ras.ac.uk

Science contacts:

Joop Schaye
Leiden Observatory, Leiden University

schaye@strw.leidenuniv.nl

Evgenii Chaikin
Leiden Observatory, Leiden University

chaikin@strw.leidenuniv.nl

James Trayford
Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation, University of Portsmouth

james.trayford@port.ac.uk

Professor Carlos Frenk
Durham University

c.s.frenk@durham.ac.uk



Images & video

Images, videos, and interactive material from the COLIBRE simulations are available at:


https://colibre-simulations.org

Media, developed using COLIBRE, can be found here: sonified videos, interactive sliders, and interactive maps.



Further information

The paper ‘The COLIBRE project: cosmological hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy formation and evolution’ by Schaye et al. has been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stag375.

The paper ‘COLIBRE: calibrating subgrid feedback in cosmological simulations that include a cold gas phase’ by Chaikin et al. has been published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stag300.



Notes for editors

About the COLIBRE collaboration

The COLIBRE collaboration is an international team led by Professor Joop Schaye, of Leiden University. It includes researchers from the UK (Durham University, Portsmouth, Hull, Liverpool John Moores, Nottingham), Austria (University of Vienna), Italy (University of Milano-Biococca), Australia (University of Western Australia), Belgium (University of Ghent) and the US (University of Pennsylvania).

A team of several Durham physicists at the Institute for Computational Cosmology contributed to the design and execution of the simulations and to the scientific analysis of the data. Members of this team wrote key elements of the software used for the simulations and helped run them on the "COSMA" supercomputer at Durham. Members of the team are leading major sub-projects analysing the simulation results and comparing them to observed data.

About NOVA

The Netherlands Research School for Astronomy (NOVA, www.astronomie.nl) is the alliance of the astronomical institutes of the universities of Amsterdam, Groningen, Leiden, and Nijmegen. The mission of Top Research School NOVA is to carry out frontline astronomical research in the Netherlands, to train young astronomers at the highest international level, and to share its new discoveries with society. The NOVA laboratories are specialised in building state-of-the-art optical/infrared and submillimeter instrumentation for the largest telescopes on earth.

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 and review 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 peer review, in which fellow experts on the editorial boards accept the paper as worth considering. 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 Mon, 13/04/2026 - 13:00


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Local Universe’s Expansion Rate Is Clearer Than Ever, but Still Doesn’t Add Up

PR Image noirlab2611a
Artist’s interpretation of the cosmic distance ladder

PR Image noirlab2611b
Graphic representation of the Hubble tension



A new synthesis of astronomical measurements confirms a persistent mismatch that could point to physics beyond current models

An international collaboration of astronomers has produced one of the most precise measurements yet of how fast the local Universe is expanding. The result deepens one of the most significant challenges in modern cosmology. John Blakeslee, astronomer at NSF NOIRLab, funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation, is a member of the collaboration, and telescopes across two NSF NOIRLab Programs contributed data.

Astronomers have sought to measure the expansion rate of the Universe using two fundamentally different approaches. One method relies on measuring distances to stars and galaxies in the nearby Universe. The other uses measurements of the cosmic microwave background to predict what the expansion rate would be today under the standard model of cosmology.

These two approaches are expected to yield the same result, but they don’t. Measurements based on the nearby Universe consistently indicate a higher expansion rate — around 73 kilometers per second per megaparsec — while predictionderived from the early Universe yield a lower value, closer to 67 or 68. Although the numerical difference is modest, it is s far larger than can be explained by statistical uncertainty. This persistent disagreement, known as the Hubble tension, has now been observed across multiple independent studies and techniques.

By bringing together decades of independent observations into a single, unified framework, an international collaboration of astronomers has achieved the most precise direct measurement to date of the expansion rate of the nearby Universe. In a paper published on 10 April in Astronomy & Astrophysics, the H0 Distance Network (H0DN) Collaboration reports a value of the Hubble constant of 73.50 ± 0.81 kilometers per second per megaparsec, corresponding to a precision of just over 1%.

The study, “The Local Distance Network: a community consensus report on the measurement of the Hubble constant at ∼1% precision,” is the outcome of a broad community effort launched at the International Space Science Institute (ISSI) Breakthrough Workshop, “What’s under the H0od?”, held at ISSI in Bern, Switzerland, in March 2025.

“This isn’t just a new value of the Hubble constant,” the collaboration notes, “it’s a community-built framework that brings decades of independent distance measurements together, transparently and accessibly.”

NSF NOIRLab contributed both expertise and observational data to this effort. John Blakeslee, astronomer and Director of Research and Science Services at NSF NOIRLab, is a member of the collaboration. The study includes data from telescopes at NSF Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) in Chile and NSF Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO) in Arizona, both Programs of NSF NOIRLab. Those data were incorporated into a broader, collaborative framework spanning both ground and space-based observatories, helping to strengthen the overall result.

Rather than relying on a single method, the team constructed a “distance network” that links many overlapping techniques for measuring distances across the local Universe. These include observations of pulsating Cepheid variable stars, red giant stars that shine with a known brightness, Type Ia supernovae, and certain types of galaxies. This approach enables multiple independent paths to the same final result, and allows for a critical test: is the discrepancy caused by an error within a single method? The results indicate that this is unlikely. Even when individual techniques are removed from the analysis, the overall result changes only minimally. Independent measurements remain consistent with one another, reinforcing the robustness of the locally measured expansion rate.

“This work effectively rules out explanations of the Hubble tension that rely on a single overlooked error in local distance measurements,” the authors conclude. “If the tension is real, as the growing body of evidence suggests, it may point to new physics beyond the standard cosmological model.”

The implications are significant. The lower expansion rate inferred from the early Universe depends on the standard model of cosmology, which describes how the Universe has evolved since the Big Bang. If that model is incomplete — for example, if it does not fully account for the behavior of dark energy, new particles, or modifications to gravity — its predictions for the present-day expansion rate would be affected.

In that case, the Hubble tension may not be the result of measurement error, but rather evidence that the current model of the Universe is missing a key component. The local distance network also establishes a framework for future investigations. By making its methods and data openly available, the collaboration has created a foundation that can be expanded with new observations. With next-generation observatories expected to provide even more precise measurements, astronomers aim to determine whether this discrepancy will ultimately be resolved or continue to point toward new physics.




More information

This research is presented in a paper titled “The Local Distance Network: A community consensus report on the measurement of the Hubble constant at ∼1% precision” to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysics. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202557993

The results are presented by the H0DN Collaboration.

NSF NOIRLab, the U.S. National Science Foundation center for ground-based optical-infrared astronomy, operates the International Gemini Observatory (a facility of NSF, NRC–Canada, ANID–Chile, MCTIC–Brazil, MINCyT–Argentina, and KASI–Republic of Korea), NSF Kitt Peak National Observatory (KPNO), NSF Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO), the Community Science and Data Center (CSDC), and NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory (in cooperation with DOE’s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory). It is managed by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with NSF and is headquartered in Tucson, Arizona.

The scientific community is honored to have the opportunity to conduct astronomical research on I’oligam Du’ag (Kitt Peak) in Arizona, on Maunakea in Hawai‘i, and on Cerro Tololo and Cerro Pachón in Chile. We recognize and acknowledge the very significant cultural role and reverence of I’oligam Du’ag to the Tohono O’odham Nation, and Maunakea to the Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiians) community.

The International Space Science Institute (ISSI) is an Institute of Advanced Studies, where scientists from all over the world meet in a neutral, welcoming, and multi-disciplinary setting to discuss and publish about relevant and compelling topics related to four Disciplines: Astrophysics, Heliophysics, Planetary Science and Earth Science. ISSI’s mission is to advance science by facilitating scientific community interactions, meetings, discussions, and publications aimed at a deeper understanding of results from different space missions, ground-based observations, and theory. This is achieved through a broad portfolio of scientific opportunities that include: International Teams, Workshops, Working Groups, Fora, or visits of individual Visiting Scientists. For additional information related to ISSI and to the opportunities it offers, see:
www.issibern.ch.



Links


Contacts:

Josie Fenske
Public Information Officer
NSF NOIRLab
Email:
josie.fenske@noirlab.edu

Fabio Crameri
Communication Scientist
ISSI
Email:
fabio.crameri@issibern.ch


Monday, April 13, 2026

Black hole X-ray binary becomes bright (again)

Artistic impression of a stellar mass black hole accreting from a binary companion and the winds emitted from the accretion disk. Credit: Gabriel Pérez Díaz, SMM (IAC). Download Image

During the past week, NuSTAR performed an observation coordinated with the JAXA/NASA/ESA XRISM observatory of the accreting stellar-mass black hole (BH) AT2019wey. AT2019wey is a low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) system harboring a rapidly spinning BH seen at a low inclination. AT2019wey was first discovered in 2019 as an optical outburst, followed by an X-ray brightening about six months later. Unlike most BH LMXBs which fade on a timescale of a few months to a year, the outburst of AT2019wey remained bright for several years, decaying around the end of 2025. However, around the beginning of 2026, the system started to rebrighten, approaching the similar flux levels as during the original outburst. Despite being observed numerous times by NuSTAR since its first discovery, this joint XRISM-NuSTAR campaign offers a unique probe of this unusual system. In particular the observing program aims to probe tentative claims of X-ray absorption in the Fe band (around 7 keV). Such features are believed to be caused by equatorial ionized outflows (winds) originating from the accretion disk in the system. The novelty of the program comes from the fact that such features are not expected to be observed in low-inclination systems, such as AT2019wey. This study will expand the understanding of the geometry of ionized outflows in X-ray binaries, and of their impact on accretion. Furthermore, by simultaneously leveraging the high-resolution capabilities of XRISM with the broad pass band and sensitivity of NuSTAR, this study will test the impact of the variability of coronal activity on disk winds, and it will enhance the ability to measure properties of the system such as the BH spin, the inclination of the system, elemental abundances, and the ionization and density of the atmosphere of the accretion disk.

Author: Dr. Paul Draghis, Kavli Postdoctoral Fellow at the MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research.