Wednesday, May 20, 2026

NuSTAR & IXPE coordinated observations of Fairall 51

An artist impression of the obscurer surrounding AGN.
Credit: R. Hurt, NASA/JPL-Caltech

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Joint observations by NuSTAR and NASA’s Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) mission last week offer a unique window into the structure of material around the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy Fairall 51. The material near the black hole in this active galactic nucleus (AGN) is thought to be oriented at a peculiar angle that reveals both the black hole’s accretion disk and surrounding circum-polar dust. By combining the unique capabilities of NuSTAR and IXPE, a detailed investigation is being made of the radiation from the hot “corona” near the black hole’s accretion disk as well as X-ray photons reflected by the dust structure beyond the disk. These data will constrain how the corona is oriented relative to the putative “torus” of material around the black hole and the perpendicular polar-scattering region identified by ground-based observatories. Ultimately, this coordinated effort will reveal how the small-scale central engine is physically linked to the vast dust structures around it, providing a full picture of the environment near the accreting supermassive black hole.

Author: Chien-Ting Chen, USRA scientist & IXPE science operations at NASA/MSFC



Recreating the Cosmos: Modeling Sulfur Chemistry in Interstellar Ice Analogues

Ultraviolet (UV) photons break up molecules in the ice on interstellar dust grains, and subsequent reactivity of the products leads to the synthesis of new molecules. Illustrated here are the starting molecules in the experiment (CS2 and CO2), and assorted sulfur-bearing molecules that either result directly from the break-up of the initial molecules, or are produced via chemical reactions. Disclaimer: This image is an AI-generated creation. © Olli Sipilä



One of astronomy’s most persistent chemical mysteries is why a major part of the sulfur reservoir appears to be missing from dense interstellar clouds. In a new study led by the Center for Astrochemical Studies (CAS) and conducted in collaboration with the Centro de Astrobiología in Madrid, MPE scientists combined laboratory experiments and advanced computer modeling to investigate how sulfur-bearing molecules evolve on icy grains in interstellar space. Their findings suggest that current theories of sulfur chemistry in the cosmos remain incomplete — but also point toward new ways of closing the gap.

Astronomers have long known that sulfur should be far more abundant in dense interstellar clouds than observations indicate. This implies that most of the sulfur reservoir is in a form that is difficult to detect, highly likely residing in the ice covering interstellar dust grains. To shed more light on this “missing sulfur problem”, MPE researchers simulated the irradiation of frozen mixtures of carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon disulfide (CS2) at temperatures near absolute zero, mimicking conditions inside dark molecular clouds where stars and planets form. Using the pyRate astrochemical code developed at CAS, adapted specifically for the experiment, the team tracked how ultraviolet radiation transforms sulfurbearing ices over time.

The simulations successfully reproduced several key chemical processes seen in the laboratory. But the model also exposed major uncertainties in current understanding of sulfur chemistry. Some compounds — including OCS, CS, and SO — formed too efficiently in the simulations, while others, such as sulfur dioxide and sulfur allotropes, were underproduced. “The discrepancy between the simulations and experiments highlights how limited our knowledge of the evolution of sulfur-bearing compounds under interstellar conditions still is”, says Olli Sipilä, a postdoctoral researcher at MPE who led the study. “However, performing simulations tailored to mimic experiments helps us understand the experimental results better, and also makes it possible to constrain effects that occurred during the experiment but which could not be directly detected.”

Toward Uncovering the Hidden Sulfur Reservoir

Another major finding of the work was that nondiffusive chemistry — chemical reactions occurring without the need for molecules to migrate across the ice surface — is essential for reproducing many of the sulfurbearing compounds observed experimentally. “It is clear that customary models where reactivity is limited by the reactants diffusing on the ice simply cannot reproduce the experimental findings”, says Wiebke Riedel, a postdoctoral researcher and recent CAS graduate who developed the implementation of nondiffusive chemistry in pyRate.

The work represents the first attempt to model a complex, multicomponent interstellar ice experiment using a rate-equation astrochemical code, marking an important milestone for the field. By combining experimental and theoretical approaches, the study offers a new framework for investigating how sulfur is stored and transformed in space — a question closely tied to the chemistry that shapes emerging planetary systems and, ultimately, the ingredients available for life.




Contacts:

Dr. Olli Sipilä
Postdoc at Center for Astrochemical Studies
Tel:
+49 89 30000-3646
Email: osipila@mpe.mpg.de
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching

Dr. Wiebke Riedel
Postdoc at Center for Astrochemical Studies
Tel:
+49 89 30000-3007
Email: riedel@mpe.mpg.de
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching



Original Publication

O. Sipilä, R. Martín-Doménech, W. Riedel, D. Navarro-Almaida, A. Fuente, A. Taillard, G.M. Muñoz Caro
Modeling the UV-photon irradiation of CS2-bearing ices in the laboratory with the pyRate gas-grain astrochemical code
Astronomy & Astrophysics

Source | DOI



Further Information


January 23, 2026
Astrophysicists Discover Largest Sulfur-Containing Molecular Compound in Space




July 04, 2024
Using the JWST, a team of researchers including Paola Caselli and Michela Giuliano from MPE, have probed deep into dense cloud cores, revealing details of interstellar ice that were previously unobservable. The study focuses on the Chamaeleon I region, using JWST’s NIRCam to measure spectroscopic lines towards hundreds of stars behind the cloud.


Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Astronomers Find Most Chemically Primitive Galaxy in Early Universe

Revealing the Nature of the Ultra-Faint Galaxy LAP1-B through a giant “gravitational lens.” A 3 color image created from data taken with the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Because the stars in this galaxy are extremely faint and few in number, the galaxy is invisible in the background image taken by NIRCam, but another instrument, the Near-Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSpec) was able to detect chemical signatures. A visualization (not an actual image) of the NIRSpec velocity and distribution data is shown in the inset for oxygen (green) and two different excitation states of hydrogen (blue and red). (Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA & K. Nakajima et al., Nature). Image (703KB)



An international team of astronomers has used the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and a natural phenomenon known as gravitational lensing to achieve a definitive characterization of LAP1-B, an ultra-faint galaxy from 13 billion years ago. Expanding upon initial detections, this new study revealed a record-breaking low oxygen abundance – merely 1/240th that of the Sun. This chemically primitive state, coupled with an elevated carbon-to-oxygen ratio and a dominant dark matter halo, suggests that LAP1-B is the long-sought “ancestor” of the mysterious fossil galaxies found near our Milky Way Galaxy today.

Just after the Big Bang, contained only light elements like hydrogen and helium. The heavier elements, such as oxygen and carbon, were forged much later inside the hearts of the very first stars. For decades, astronomers have tried to find the moment these “first-generation stars” began scattering heavier elements across the cosmos. However, the earliest galaxies hosting such young, primordial stars are so small and faint that seeing their chemical makeup was considered nearly impossible – until now.

A research team led by Kimihiko Nakajima of Kanazawa University and including Masami Ouchi at the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) and the University of Tokyo focused on a tiny, ultra-faint galaxy named LAP1-B. Its light was magnified 100 times by a phenomenon called “gravitational lensing,” where the gravity of a massive galaxy cluster acts like a natural giant telescope lens in space. By staring at this spot for over 30 hours with JWST, the team determined that the galaxy’s oxygen abundance is roughly 1/240th that of the Sun. “I was instantly thrilled by the extreme lack of oxygen,” says Nakajima. “Finding a galaxy in such a primitive state is astonishing. It’s a chemical signature that clearly indicates a primordial galaxy caught in the moments shortly after its formation.”

Beyond its primitive nature, the galaxy exhibited a high carbon-to-oxygen abundance ratio. This unique ratio of elements aligns closely with theoretical predictions for the material dispersed by the explosions of the universe’s first-generation stars.

The team also discovered that LAP1-B is incredibly lightweight – less than 3,300 times the mass of the Sun – implying that most of the galaxy consists of invisible dark matter. This feature, together with its unique chemical makeup, makes it a near-perfect match for the “Ultra-Faint Dwarf galaxies (UFDs)” found near our Milky Way Galaxy today, which are extremely dim, small, and contain very few stars.

“UFDs are not only the faintest galaxies; they are composed of ancient stars over 12 billion years old and are often described as ‘fossils of the Universe,’” explains Ouchi. “Astronomers suspected they might be the remains of the Universe’s earliest galaxies because they lack heavy elements, but astronomers never had a direct link – until we found LAP1-B.”

Ouchi continues: “It is a profound surprise to find that LAP1-B looks exactly like the ‘ancestor’ we had only imagined in theories. This helps us solve the mystery of why these cosmic fossils have survived in their current form to the present day.”

This discovery establishes a new way to map the birth of elements and the formation of the Universe’s oldest structures. Moving forward, the team will use JWST to search for even more primitive objects, aiming to find the very first galaxies ever formed.




Release Information

Researcher(s) Involved in this Release

Kimihiko Nakajima (Kanazawa University)
Masami Ouchi (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan / University of Tokyo)

Coordinated Release Organization(s)

Kanazawa University
National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, NINS
Institute for Cosmic Ray Research, The University of Tokyo
Paper(s)

K. Nakajima et al. “An ultra-faint, chemically primitive galaxy forming in the reionization era”, in Nature, DOI: 10.1038/s41586-026-10374-1



Related Link(s)



Monday, May 18, 2026

Galaxy Cluster Relaxed Now, but was Wild in the Past

Abell 2029
Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/C. Watson et al.; Optical: PanSTARRS;
Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk and P. Edmonds

JPEG (172.4 kb) - Large JPEG (2 MB) - Tiff (54.5 MB) - More Images

A Tour of Abell 2029 - More Videos



  • New data from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory suggests an event-filled past for the galaxy cluster Abell 2029.

  • The X-rays reveal evidence for a collision with a smaller cluster about four billion years ago.

  • A sloshing spiral structure was formed when the smaller cluster made its first pass through Abell 2029, pulling its gas sideways.

  • Galaxy clusters are the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity and are bellwethers for cosmic growth.



The galaxy cluster Abell 2029 is sometimes described as “the most relaxed cluster in the Universe.” This moniker does not arise from some sort of mellow vibe, but rather because of how calm and undisturbed the superheated gas that pervades the cluster appears to be.

New observations from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory clearly show that Abell 2029 had a much more colorful history than its current disposition suggests. The latest study finds that Abell 2029 is still settling down after a raucous collision with another smaller cluster about four billion years ago.

Galaxy clusters are the largest structures in the Universe held together by gravity. They are made up of hundreds or even thousands of galaxies, unseen dark matter, and a huge amount of gas that fills in the space between the galaxies. This gas is typically heated to millions of degrees, which makes it glow in X-ray light.

A team led by astronomers from Boston University (BU) and the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) obtained the deepest X-ray observation ever made of this cluster using Chandra. The results are described in an Astrophysical Journal paper led by Courtney Watson from BU and CfA.

The Chandra data reveal clear signs that this cluster did not have a mundane history. This new composite image shows evidence for the cluster’s previous shenanigans in the nautilus-like shape in the Chandra data (blue). Optical light from stars and galaxies in the same field of view appears mainly white in an image from Pan-STARRS, a telescope in Hawaii.

The team think the spiral shape in the hot gas formed when gas in the cluster sloshed to the side because of the gravitational effects of the cluster collision — similar to how wine moves in a wine glass. The sloshing spiral in Abell 2029 is one of the longest ever seen, extending about two million light-years from the center of the cluster.

Abell 2029, "splash" and "bay" features labeled. Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/C. Watson et al.; Optical: PanSTARRS; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk and P. Edmonds


Computer simulations of the collision suggest that the smaller cluster was about ten times less massive than the larger cluster. The sloshing spiral formed when the smaller cluster made its first pass through the larger cluster, pulling its gas sideways. The gravity of the larger cluster then caused the other cluster to slow down and get pulled back in for a second collision. This drove a shock front and left behind a wake of material, forming the splash region.

To uncover these various features the authors used a special technique that examined how much the cluster’s hot gas deviates from a symmetrical shape. Most of the hot gas is symmetrical and is approximately shaped like an oval. The authors removed (“subtracted”) this symmetrical oval shape from the original X-ray image. The remaining X-ray emission in the “subtracted image” clearly shows the unusual features of the sloshing spiral, the bay and the splash area. The shock front is too faint to be seen in this image.

The new composite image combines both the original X-ray and the subtracted X-ray images of the deep Chandra observations of Abell 2029. The subtracted X-ray image (light blue) strikingly shows the sloshing spiral. Most of the original X-ray image is a darker blue color, apart from the center of the image, which is light blue. Two other features — the bay and the splash area — are labeled in an annotated version. The brightness of the original image has been reduced in this image to better show the subtracted image.

Courtney Watson conducted this work as a graduate student at BU and a predoctoral fellow at CfA. In addition to Watson, the authors of the paper are Elizabeth Blanton (Boston University), who was the Principal Investigator for the Chandra observations, Scott Randall (CfA), Tracy Clarke (Naval Research Laboratory), and John ZuHone (CfA).

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.

There are several other key pieces of evidence for the past bash, never before seen together in a cluster, allowing the team to trace the collision history of the cluster in unprecedented detail. For example, the team sees hints of a wide “splash” of cooler gas created by the collision. There may also be a shock wave — akin to a sonic boom from a supersonic plane — in the superheated gas left over from the collision. Finally, there is a “bay” feature in the hot gas, which the researchers think might be caused by an overlap between the outer parts of the spiral and gas stripped away from the smaller cluster as it passed through the larger one. Though the authors think it is a relic from the collision, other explanations for this structure are also possible.





Visual Description:

This release features a composite image of a galaxy cluster with a unique spiral shape, giving it the appearance of a giant galactic seashell floating in the star-speckled blackness of space.

In this composite image, the surrounding stars and individual galaxies appear white, captured in optical light from Pan-STARRS, a telescope in Hawaii. But much of the spiraling cluster is rendered in neon blues, representing X-ray gas observed by Chandra. This super-heated gas fills the space between galaxies, giving the cluster its spiral shape when observed by scientists using an X-ray telescope.

Here, the blue spiral begins as a pale blue dot at the center of the cluster. The spiral stream of light and dark neon blue gas then widens as it moves away from the center of the cluster, gently corkscrewing one full rotation as it extends two-million lightyears into the distance.



Fast Facts for Abell 2029

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/C. Watson et al.; Optical: PanSTARRS; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk and P. Edmonds
Release Date: May 12, 2026
Scale: Image is about 25 arcmin (7.2 million light-years) across.
Category:
Groups & Clusters of Galaxies
Coordinates (J2000): RA 15h 10m 56.1s | Dec +05° 44´ 40.0"
Constellation:
Virgo
Observation Dates: 24 observations from Apr 12, 2000 to Jun 6, 2023
Observation Time: 143 hours 3 minutes (5 days 23 hours 3 minutes)
Obs. ID: 891, 4977, 6101, 25496, 25814-25826, 26380, 26393, 26420, 26428, 27805, 27853, 27848
Instrument:
ACIS
References: Watson, C.B., et al., 2026, ApJ, 996, 106.
Color Code: X-ray: blue and white; Optical: red, green, and blue
Distance Estimate: About 1.0 billion light-years from Earth (z~0.0767)



Sunday, May 17, 2026

Astronomers Directly Detect How Turbulence Between Stars Distorts Light

Radio light from quasar TXS 2005+403 travels roughly 10 billion light-years to reach Earth, traversing the Cygnus region, one of the most turbulent and scattering environments in the Milky Way Galaxy. On the left, this artist's conception shows the quasar as it truly appears, with a bright accretion disk and jets blasting into the galaxy like a beacon through the darkness. On the right, we see how turbulent gas distorts scientists' view of the quasar in much the same way heat haze from a fire warps our view of the objects behind it. In a new study led by astronomers from the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA), scientists have for the first time directly detected how interstellar turbulence distorts light from a distant quasar, revealing the structure of that turbulence. Credit: Melissa Weiss/CfA



Using a distant quasar as a beacon, researchers identified the tiny, turbulence-driven ripples imprinted on the quasar’s radio signal as it passed through a particularly chaotic region of the Milky Way.

Cambridge, MA (May 13, 2026) — Astronomers led by the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) have made the first direct detection of turbulence distorting light in the interstellar medium. The findings will help scientists achieve clearer imaging of the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.

The article was published today in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The space between stars in our galaxy, known as the interstellar medium, is churning with clouds of ionized gas and electrons. When waves of radio light from distant objects pass through this turbulent material, they are bent and distorted in the same way heat haze rising above a fire distorts our view of everything behind it.

That distortion has long allowed astronomers to infer that the turbulence exists, but understanding its structure has remained out of reach until now.

To measure the turbulence, astronomers set their sights on quasar TXS 2005+403, a bright radio source powered by a supermassive black hole that is located roughly 10 billion light-years away from Earth in the constellation Cygnus. As radio light from the quasar travels toward Earth, it passes through the Cygnus region of the galaxy, one of the most turbulent and strongly scattering environments in the Milky Way, causing the radio waves to be deflected and distorted.

“Most of what we see in the radio data isn’t coming from the quasar itself, it’s coming from the scattering caused by the turbulence in this region of the Milky Way,” said Alexander Plavin, an astronomer at the CfA’s Black Hole Initiative and lead author of the new paper.

“That scattering and the distortions that come with it are what allows us to study the turbulence and better understand and infer its structure.”

To get a better look at the effects of turbulence on light from the quasar, scientists analyzed nearly a decade of archival observations from the U.S. National Science Foundation’s Very Long Baseline Array (NSF VLBA). Operated by NSF’s National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NSF NRAO), the NSF VLBA is a network of ten radio telescopes spread across the country.

Scientists expected that when radio light from TXS 2005+403 passed though the Milky Way, it would spread out into a smooth blur and fade away. Instead, they found persistent, distinct patterns, producing structured, patchy distortions in the light that could only have come from turbulence. “The most distant pairs of telescopes should not have seen the quasar image, but to our surprise, they clearly detected its signal, or faint glow,” Plavin said. “It can’t be explained by simple blurring or by the quasar itself, and it behaves the way turbulence is expected to, which is how we know we’re seeing the effects of interstellar turbulence.”

Plavin added that the scattering properties along this line of sight through the galaxy remain persistent over time.

The findings have significant implications for future astronomical research. The turbulence detected here exists at scales roughly the size of our solar system. Understanding it helps explain how energy moves through the galaxy and how gas behaves before collapsing to form new stars.

The findings may also directly inform efforts to sharpen images of black holes. The Event Horizon Telescope's images of Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way, are degraded by this same interstellar scattering. Studying how turbulence scatters radio light over time and different frequencies provides a path toward removing its effects from those images.

The team has begun a follow-up observing campaign with the NSF VLBA running through 2026, with an aim to measure the specific properties of the screen created by this turbulence and track how it changes as the gas moves relative to Earth.




About the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian

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


Saturday, May 16, 2026

A beacon of light in swirls of dust

A spiral galaxy shown in mid-infrared light. The image is dominated by an extremely bright glow from the galaxy’s nucleus. Six large and two smaller rays of light emit from the centre, which are diffraction spikes created by the telescope’s optics. The galaxy’s spiral arms are visible by two lines of glowing orange bubbles which whirl out into the disc. Swirling blue clouds of dust make up the rest of the galaxy. Credit:ESA/Webb, NASA & CSA, A. Leroy




This latest Picture of the Month from the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope features Messier 77 (M77), a barred spiral galaxy famous and appreciated among astronomers for its combination of relative proximity and spectacular features to study. It is located 45 million light-years away in the constellation Cetus (The Whale). This new image from Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) highlights its swirling spiral arms, the dust in its disc and its piercingly bright core like never before.

At the heart of M77 is a compact region filled with hot gas that handily outshines the rest of the galaxy put together, even overcoming the light-gathering capacity of Webb’s cameras. This is an active galactic nucleus (AGN), and it’s powered by M77’s central supermassive black hole, which is eight million times as massive as our Sun. Gas in the galaxy’s central regions is pulled by the strong gravity into a tight and rapid orbit around the black hole, where it crashes together and heats up, releasing tremendous amounts of radiation.

The bright orange lines appearing to radiate out from the centre of M77 are not actually a feature of the galaxy: they are a type of distortion that arises from the optical design of the telescope. Called diffraction spikes, they are created because the intense light from the unresolved AGN is bent (“diffracted”) very slightly at the edges of Webb’s hexagonal mirror panels and around one of the struts that hold up its secondary mirror. This distinctive six-plus-two-pointed pattern is the same for any image taken by Webb. For diffraction spikes to appear, the light source has to be very bright and very concentrated, so they’re most often seen on stars. But in some galaxies, as here, the nucleus is bright and compact enough to make diffraction spikes appear as well.

M77 is not just known for its easily visible AGN, but also as a prolific star-forming galaxy. The near-infrared image of M77 reveals a bar spanning across the central region, which doesn’t appear in visible-light images of the galaxy. The bar is enclosed by a bright ring, called a starburst ring, formed by the inner ends of M77’s two spiral arms. Starburst regions in galaxies are typified by extremely high star-formation rates. This ring is more than 6 000 light-years across and displays intense and widespread starbursts, visible in this image by the densely concentrated orange bubbles all around the ring. Since M77 is relatively close to Earth, this starburst ring is a very well-studied example of the phenomenon.

As an active spiral galaxy, M77’s disc is filled with gas and dust which is both a product of and fuel for future star formation. Webb’s MIRI fills out our view of the galaxy with the glow of interstellar dust grains emitted at longer wavelengths, shown here in blue. The dust forms a huge vortex of smoky, swirling filaments with cavities in between. The glowing orange bubbles carved out by newly formed star clusters are also prominently visible out along the galaxy’s arms.

Beyond Webb’s quite focused view, M77’s arms join into a faint extended ring of hydrogen gas thousands of light-years wide, where yet more star formation is taking place. Vast, tenuous filaments of hydrogen gas stretch across this ring and out into intergalactic space, forming an outermost layer around the galaxy. For the tentacle-like appearance of these filaments, M77 is also named the Squid Galaxy.

The data used to create this image are from an observing programme (#3707) that surveyed massive, nearby, star-forming galaxies to create a rich dataset useful for many scientific investigations. As can be seen here, the stunning resolution of Webb’s instruments reveals star clusters and rich reservoirs of gas, which can be used to explore the cycle of star formation, life and death in these and other galaxies.




Links


Friday, May 15, 2026

Hunting for Exomoons Around a Lonely Planet

llustration of an exoplanet with a small volcanic exomoon.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech

Title: A Deep Search for Exomoons Around WISE 0855 with JWST
Authors: Mikayla J. Wilson et al.
First Author’s Institution: University of California, Santa Cruz
Status: Published in AJ


The “Moon”-umental Question

The solar system hosts hundreds of moons, ranging from volcanic worlds like Io around Jupiter, to icy objects like Enceladus around Saturn, to captured objects like Neptune’s retrograde moon Triton. Moons are essential to our model of how the solar system formed and also offer some of the best chances we have for finding life beyond Earth.

Astronomers also expect exomoons, or moons orbiting planets outside the solar system, to be abundant around other giant exoplanets. But how common are exomoons? How do they compare to the moons in our solar system?

In order to begin answering those questions, we must first detect an exomoon, which has proved difficult despite decades of searching by astronomers. Fortunately, JWST presents a new opportunity to uncover the exomoon population by looking at lonely free-floating planets as they drift through space.

Why Free-Floating Planets?

One proposed method for searching for exomoons is by looking for their transits in front of their host planets, characterized by the dips in brightness of the planet as the moon passes in front, blocking the planet’s light. Looking for exomoon transits around planets orbiting stars is quite difficult, as the bright starlight can easily drown out the small signals of exomoon transits. Free-floating planets solve this issue by removing the star entirely, increasing our sensitivity to such detections. (See this bite for a good review.)

The authors of today’s article directed the exomoon hunt towards the free-floating WISE J085510.83-071442.5 (or WISE 0855). It has the prestige of being the coldest known brown dwarf (250–285K) while also sitting at a relatively low mass (3–10 Jupiter masses). Notably, it is also one of our closest neighbors at a distance of only 7.4 light-years, making it ideal for high-precision observations despite its faintness. Even though brown dwarfs are technically distinct from planets, the authors opt to refer to companions around WISE 0855 as moons given WISE 0855’s “planetary-mass” status. (It’s complicated…)

Repurposing JWST Data… for Moons!

The JWST observations used in this study contain 11 hours of near-infrared (2.87–5.27 microns) time-series spectra originally intended to study water clouds and weather on WISE 0855. Time-series brightness monitoring can also be used for transit searches, which the authors take advantage of.

One complication is that WISE 0855 is variable, meaning its intrinsic brightness changes over time. Variability is likely driven by clouds and other dynamic processes within its atmosphere. So how do the authors distinguish between a passing moon and a turbulent atmosphere? The key idea is that variability is wavelength dependent, meaning that the brightness of WISE 0855 will fluctuate differently depending on the observed wavelength. In contrast, transits are “gray,” meaning that the same amount of light is blocked at all wavelengths, producing a consistent feature across the entire spectrum.

Finding Moons with Statistics!

The authors apply this idea and pick out two wavelength regions of WISE 0855’s spectrum that contain two distinct variability patterns, which should both contain an identical moon transit signal (if present). They then generate a light curve (how brightness changes over time) for these two regions (see Fig. 1).

Figure 1: (A) Light curves from two selected wavelength regions of WISE 0855’s spectrum with injected transit signals. Also plotted is the best-fit Gaussian processes + transit model for the two light curves. (B) Light curve data after subtracting the Gaussian processes portion of the best-fit model, revealing the example injected transit signals. Credit: Wilson et al. 2025


To appropriately model the variability, the authors employ Gaussian processes, a flexible tool that can model complex, quasi-periodic signals like atmospheric variability. They compare fits from two types of models:
  • Gaussian processes–only model: Assumes that all observed variability is intrinsic to the planet itself

  • Gaussian processes + transit model: Includes a simple trapezoidal exomoon transit signal that is simultaneously fit in both light curves
Using Bayesian evidence (a measure of how well each model explains the data), they determined which model was favored. So, what do they find?

The Bad News and the Good News

Based on Bayesian evidence, the authors conclude that there are no statistically significant detections of exomoons in the data. The results suggest very weak evidence for a ~0.53-Earth-radius moon at a wide separation from WISE 0855 — an unlikely scenario given that transit probability decreases at greater separations (and therefore longer orbital periods).

Yet, the study goes further: What kinds of moons is JWST able to detect, if any? To answer this, the authors performed injection and recovery tests, where they injected artificial transit signals of varying depths (exomoon sizes) into the data and tested how well their models were able to recover them (results shown in Fig. 2). They find that JWST is capable of detecting 96% of transits with depths ≥0.5%, equivalent to a Titan-like moon. Smaller Io-like moons were also detectable more than half of the time. This means that if a Titan analog had actually transited during these observations, we would almost certainly have seen it!

Figure 2: Results showing the number of successful detections for the transit injection and recovery tests. Fifty transit injections are done for transit depths of 1%, 0.5%, 0.4%, 0.3%, 0.2%, and 0.1%. The transit depths represent different exomoon sizes, with the shaded regions representing Io-like and Titan-like moons. Credit: Wilson et al. 2025


JWST will continue to gather more time-series data of free-floating planets, brown dwarfs, and directly imaged exoplanets, each providing a new opportunity to help us better understand the moon population outside of our solar system. We’re still waiting for the first confirmed exomoon, but when that transit finally happens, we know that JWST will be ready.

Original astrobite edited by Kelsie Taylor.




About the author, Jared Bull:

I am a 2nd-year PhD student at Johns Hopkins University. I study brown dwarf variability and am interested in using time-series observations to uncover dynamic processes within their atmospheres. In my free time I like to read, cook, and do astrophotography.



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


Thursday, May 14, 2026

Black Hole Stars

Artists impression of a Black Hole Star. The cut-out reveals the central black hole with its surrounding accretion disk. Credit: MPIA/HdA/T. Muller/A. de Graaff.
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During the past week, NuSTAR performed a 21-hour observation of J1622+3521, a newly-discovered “Green Pea” galaxy hosting a powerful accreting supermassive black hole. Green Pea galaxies were first discovered by Citizen Scientists in 2009 as bright green point-like galaxies, which we now believe are primarily compact (<5 kpc size), highly starforming (~10 solar masses per year) galaxies at a specfic distance range (average redshift ~0.25) such that the strong oxygen emission lines from the starburst are shifted into bands that produce an apparent green color. However, the oxygen emission could from processes other than star formation. Green Peas have recently gained renewed interest since the discovery of “Little Red Dots” by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. First identified as surprisingly bright red point-like galaxies in James Webb infrared images, scientists have been wrestling with explaining this population. One recent theory is that Little Red Dots are powered by Black Hole Stars -- enormous pristine gas stars reaching millions of solar masses powered by an accreting massive black hole at its center. One of the most powerful probes of accretion onto compact objects is X-ray observations, but so far no X-ray observatory has come close to detecting a Black Hole Star candidate. With many studies now suggesting that Green Pea galaxies could be the low-redshift analogues of Little Red Dots, the NuSTAR observations of J1622+3521 will search for conclusive evidence of a Black Hole Star from the nature of its X-ray spectrum. If J1622+3521 is powered by accretion from a spherical cloud of thick pristine gas, NuSTAR should show the strong signatures of X-ray reprocessing at energies above 10 keV, offering the most sensitive direct X-ray constraints to date on the existence of a Black Hole Star.

Author: Peter Boorman, NewAthena/WFI Project Scientist, Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics



Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Baryons at the Edge: SRG/eROSITA Survey Detects “Missing” Cosmic Gas at the Outskirts of Galaxy Clusters

X-rays from the large-scale environment around a galaxy cluster in the IllustrisTNG simulation show how the cluster’s outer atmosphere, beyond r200m, connects to other halos through cosmic filaments. © Xiaoyuan Zhang / MPE, based on the IllustrisTNG simulations



A team of astronomers at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE), has detected hot gas extending beyond galaxy clusters using data from the eROSITA All-Sky Survey. This finding reveals the distribution of hot gas in the outskirts, indicating that galaxy clusters are actively accreting material from the cosmic web. This study shows that these regions host the baryonic matter that is missing from the galaxy cluster center, enhancing our understanding of galaxy cluster growth and the surrounding intergalactic environment.

Using data from the SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey, the team of international researchers have now achieved a key advance in tracing ordinary matter in the Universe. They detected hot, shock-heated gas extending far beyond the previously studied boundaries of galaxy clusters, offering a new perspective on how these vast cosmic structures grow by drawing in material from the surrounding intergalactic medium.

The study, led by scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE), focuses on the outermost regions of galaxy clusters – areas that have been particularly difficult to observe until now. The results reveal how hot gas is distributed in and around these distant outskirts, offering insights into the environments surrounding some of the most massive structures in the Universe.

Bridging the Gap Between Clusters and the Cosmos

Galaxy clusters are among the largest gravitationally bound systems in the Universe, containing hundreds to thousands of galaxies embedded within vast halos of dark matter and filled with hot, diffuse plasma. Yet, the transition between a cluster and the surrounding cosmic web – the network of gas filaments connecting large-scale structures – has long remained uncertain.

Over the past five decades, X-ray space telescopes have shown that galaxy clusters host hot thermal atmospheres with temperatures of tens of millions of degrees and spatial extents of several million light-years. However, the true size of these atmospheres has been unclear because their X-ray brightness drops sharply at large distances from the cluster center.

By “stacking” X-ray data from 680 galaxy clusters, the team amplified the faint glow of gas in these remote regions. They detected a statistically significant X-ray signal extending out to 4.5 megaparsecs (about 14 million light-years) – well beyond the virial radius, which is generally considered the cluster’s edge.

“The survey’s observation depth for a single object is shallow, but it covers the entire western Galactic hemisphere. By selecting 680 galaxy clusters in the nearby Universe, we obtained an extremely high signal-to-noise surface brightness profile through stacking,” explains lead author Xiaoyuan Zhang, postdoctoral researcher at MPE.

Significant stacked X-ray emission
Animation showing the improvement in the signal-to-noise ratio as more galaxy clusters are added to the stacking. Both the noise level in the stacked image (left) and the surface brightness profile uncertainty (right) decrease with increasing stacking sample size.

“Historically, observations have focused mainly on cluster centers because signals from the outskirts are weak. It is extremely exciting that we can now probe the very edges of clusters – regions that can tell us much about the fundamental physics of gas and dark matter,” adds co-author Benedikt Diemer, Assistant Professor at the University of Maryland.

Using the IllustrisTNG cosmological simulations, developed by researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, the team showed that gas around galaxy clusters is not distributed evenly. It is much denser along cosmic filaments – the large-scale structures connecting matter across the Universe – than in the low-density voids between them. This indicates that galaxy clusters are actively accreting material from the cosmic web through these filamentary channels.

MPE research group leader Esra Bulbul, second author of the study, adds: “Astronomers have long searched for the Universe’s ‘missing baryons’ – the normal matter that should exist but has been difficult to detect. Our results show that, in the far outskirts of galaxy clusters, the amount of gas reaches about 90 percent of what we expect based on the Universe’s average matter density. This suggests that much of the ‘missing’ matter is indeed present, hidden in these vast, hot, and turbulent outer regions. This helps us understand not only how clusters grow but also the physics of the gas that fills the cosmos.”

This study highlights that, in addition to its strong source-detection capabilities, the eROSITA All-Sky Survey also enables the exploration of extremely faint emission – down to below one percent of the sky background – through stacking techniques.




eROSITA

The eROSITA instrument (extended ROentgen Survey with an Imaging Telescope Array) is the primary telescope aboard the Spektr RG (SRG) mission. It was designed to perform the most sensitive all-sky X-ray survey to date, mapping millions of active galactic nuclei and galaxy clusters to study the evolution of the large-scale structure of the Universe and the nature of dark energy.



Contacts:

Dr. Xiaoyuan Zhang
Postdoc Highenergy Group
Tel.:
+49 89 30000-3807
Email: xzhang@mpe.mpg.de
Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics

Dr. Esra Bulbul
Head of galaxy clusters group
Tel:
+49 89 30000-3502
Email: ebulbul@...
Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics



Original Publication

X. Zhang, E. Bulbul, B. Diemer, Y. E. Bahar, J. Comparat, V. Ghirardini, A. Liu, ,N. Malavasi, T. Mistele, M. Ramos-Ceja, J. S. Sanders, Y. Zhang, E. Artis, Z. Ding, L. Fiorino, M. Kluge, A. Merloni, K. Nandra, and S. Zelmer
The SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey Detection of shock-heated gas beyond the halo boundary into the accretion region.
A&A

Source | DOI



Further Information

eROSITA website of the MPE
ERC Project DarkQuest
Webpages of the ERC funded project led by Esra Bulbul

eROSITA relaxes cosmological tension

February 14, 2024

Results from the first X-ray sky survey resolve the previous inconsistency between competing measurements of the structure of the Universe


Unveiling the 'Ghost' Baryonic Matter

November 19, 2024

A team of scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics (MPE) has shed light on one of the most elusive components of the universe: the warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM).

The X-ray sky opens to the world

January 31, 2024

First eROSITA sky-survey data release makes public the largest ever catalogue of high-energy cosmic sources

June 19, 2020


Cosmic dance of the ‘Space Clover’

April 30, 2024

A group led by MPE has, for the first time, detected X-ray gas at the location of the cloverleaf ORC, an odd radio circle (ORC). The origin of ORCs is unknown; in the case of the cloverleaf ORC, the combined data from different wavelengths indicate that the emission is due to a merger of two small galaxy groups.


Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Hubble Survey Sets Up Roman’s Future Look Near Milky Way’s Center


About this image: This near-infrared image from the ground-based VISTA VVV Survey shows the galactic bulge near Sagittarius A* (pronounced “A star”), the black hole at the Milky Way’s center. The region, outlined in white, shows five stacked fields of view from NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope that will be observed as part of its Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey, one of its three core community surveys. (Roman will also observe a sixth field at the galactic center that is not shown here.) Prior to Roman’s launch, a team of researchers sought to use Hubble to capture the same regions in preparation for potential microlensing events.

These events cause the light from a more distant object to warp as a mass precisely aligns in front of that object. These masses, therefore, act like lenses, bending the light from objects behind them like background stars. In this case, the glow from the densely packed stars within the galactic bulge would be the distant light source. Having these Hubble observations allows us to capture the moments before these microlensing events happen, providing astronomers a way to clearly characterize objects (stars, planets, and even stellar-mass black holes) that cause microlensing by passing in front of stars within the galactic bulge.

The colored lines representing the Hubble survey area are stylized and represent a large number of individual pointings.

Credits Image: NASA, Alyssa Pagan (STScI) - Acknowledgment: VISTA, Dante Minniti (UNAB), Ignacio Toledo (ALMA), Martin Kornmesser (ESO) //imag

A follow-up observation by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope shows a field containing a microlensing event that was captured by the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE) in 2013. This provides an example of how a Hubble image could be used to analyze future microlensing events spotted by NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope.

In gravitational microlensing, the gravity of a foreground object acts as a lens, magnifying and distorting the light of a background star when the two objects align in the sky. Credits Image: NASA, ESA, Sean Terry (UMD), Jay Anderson (STScI) - Image Processing: Alyssa Pagan (STScI)

This graphic illustrates a microlensing event, which occurs when the light from a distant object warps as a mass, such as a star (depicted here) or a stellar-mass black hole, precisely aligns in front of that object. In this image, a red, foreground star intervenes between the telescope, acting as the “lens,” bending, and magnifying the light of the yellow background star. Unlike some gravitational lensing events, which occur at the scale of galaxies or galaxy clusters, microlensing events occur on a much smaller scale, such as that of individual stars. The lensing effect is, therefore, much smaller.

This image also provides a representation of what the background star would look like to a telescope in a microlensing event. Because of the curvature of space around the background star (represented by the white arrows that curve around it in the image), the background star appears to increase in brightness as the event begins before decreasing in apparent brightness as it falls out of alignment. The graph at bottom plots the apparent brightness of the background star over time. Credits Illustration: NASA, STScI, Joyce Kang (STScI)

This video shows a zoom into the Milky Way’s galactic bulge near the galactic center. As it zooms in, the view changes from the near-infrared 2MASS survey to the VISTA VVV survey (both ground-based). At the conclusion of the zoom, part of the region of the galactic bulge that will be surveyed by Roman’s Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey is highlighted with five stacked fields of view. (Roman will also observe a sixth field at the galactic center that is not shown here.)

Prior to Roman’s launch, a team of researchers are using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope to observe the same regions to enable better analysis of microlensing events detected by Roman. The colored lines representing the Hubble survey area are stylized and represent a large number of individual pointings. The video also labels Sagittarius A* (pronounced “A star”), the black hole at the Milky Way’s center. Credits Video: NASA, Alyssa Pagan (STScI) - Acknowledgment: VISTA, Caltech, Caltech/IPAC, Sean Terry (UMD), Jay Anderson (STScI), Dante Minniti (UNAB), Ignacio Toledo (ALMA), Martin Kornmesser (ESO), 2MASS



The Milky Way’s galactic bulge, the bulbous region that surrounds the galactic center, contains a dense collection of stars, planets, and other free-floating objects. This region has been studied for decades with numerous ground-based and space-based telescopes, including NASA’s Hubble and James Webb space telescopes. Soon, NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will be the first to make studying the galactic bulge a part of its core science objectives, building on the data collected from all observatories before it. Roman’s field of view will cover more area at a far faster cadence than previous space telescopes, allowing it to survey millions of stars and find thousands of new exoplanets.

To support Roman in characterizing numerous stars and planets, astronomers sought to use Hubble to observe many of the same areas of the galactic bulge that Roman will observe in its core Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey. By comparing Hubble data taken months or years earlier to new Roman data, astronomers will be better able to interpret Roman’s forthcoming observations. The Roman telescope team is targeting as soon as early September 2026 for launch.

“A top priority of our Hubble survey is to cover as much sky area as possible,” said Sean Terry, project lead and assistant research scientist from the University of Maryland, College Park and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt.

A paper about the team’s work published May 11, 2026 in the Astrophysical Journal.

‘Small’ lenses, large discoveries

Many planetary systems within the Milky Way evolve much like our solar system did, beginning with the collapse of a cosmic gas cloud, the growth of a star, and the formation of surrounding planets. However, in some systems, different events can result in a planet being ejected from the system where it formed. Hundreds of these “rogue planets” will be detected by Roman’s Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey, in addition to previously unseen, isolated neutron stars, and even black holes with masses similar to our Sun.

This survey consists of six 72-day observing seasons during which Roman will take a snapshot every 12 minutes of a large portion of the bulge (approximately 1.7 square degrees of the region, or the area of 8.5 full moons). While it will detect a variety of targets, the survey is optimized to look for a specific type of event known as microlensing.

Microlensing events, a type of gravitational lensing event, occur when the light from a more distant object is warped by the mass of a closer object along the line of sight. These events occur on a much smaller scale than larger lensing events (on the order of individual stars instead of galaxies or galaxy clusters) and allow us to search for exoplanets between us and the densely packed stars within the galactic bulge.

“The great thing about microlensing is that we’ll be able to do a complete census of objects as small as Mars that are moving between us and these fields in the bulge, no matter what it is,” said co-author Jay Anderson of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.

For Roman, from Hubble

When a telescope observes a lensing object, such as a bright star, aligning with a star in the galactic bulge, it can be difficult for astronomers to decipher which of the two the starlight comes from. Therefore, timing is a key consideration. If astronomers can identify light sources separately before a microlensing event occurs, it becomes far easier to disentangle them.

To collect this pre-Roman data, astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope to conduct a large-scale survey, which began in the spring of 2025, covering much of the same area that Roman will observe in the Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey. The size of this program is even larger than two previous surveys (each around 0.5 square degrees) that led to Hubble’s largest mosaic, that of our neighboring Andromeda galaxy, which took over 10 years to assemble.

“The main goal of these observations is to be able to identify objects that participate in lensing events during the Roman survey, catching them before they undergo the lensing event,” said Anderson. “When, in a couple of years, an event happens during Roman's long stare at the field, we can go back and say, ‘This was a red star, this was a blue star, and the event happened when the red star went in front of the blue star.’”

The data from Hubble also will help shape the analysis of the lensing objects themselves. The microlensing event itself measures only a ratio of the masses of a host star and its planet. With data from stars before or after their microlensing events, however, scientists would be able to measure the stars’ individual masses, echoing the way Hubble previously determined the mass of a star and its planet in the Milky Way. This method turns a more opaque measurement of the relationship between a star and its planet into one far more certain.

“Instead of estimating a mass ratio of a planet that's orbiting a star, we can say that we're confident it's a Saturn-mass planet orbiting a star that's 0.8 solar masses, for example,” Terry said. “So with the help of precursor imaging from Hubble you can hope to get direct measurements of the masses as opposed to indirect mass ratios.”

Next leap in magnitude

While exoplanet discovery is a large part of Roman’s Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey, observing such a large area with Hubble also can help identify areas of extinction, dense pockets of dust and gas that absorb or scatter light, allowing us to create maps detailing where we can see stars and where we can’t.

Hubble’s survey also has provided the crucial beginning of a brand-new catalog of stars, which will help astronomers characterize the host stars of exoplanets discovered by Roman. The research team predicts Roman will add to Hubble’s star catalog by an order of magnitude.

“This Hubble survey will build a catalog of 20 to 30 million point sources,” said Terry. “But, by the end of the Galactic Bulge Time-Domain Survey, Roman may measure about 200 to 300 million, and it will produce, essentially, some of the deepest images ever taken of any part of the sky.”

The data from the most recent Hubble survey is available in the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes.

The Hubble Space Telescope has been operating for over three decades and continues to make ground-breaking discoveries that shape our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA Goddard manages the telescope and mission operations. Lockheed Martin Space, based in Denver, also supports mission operations at Goddard. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, conducts Hubble science operations for NASA.

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




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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

Christine Pulliam
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

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Monday, May 11, 2026

NASA's Roman Poised to Transform Hunt for Elusive Neutron Stars

This artist’s concept shows an isolated neutron star as an ultra-dense stellar remnant, packing more mass than the Sun into a city-sized sphere and radiating energy as it slowly cools in the depths of space.

NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will search for, and could measure the mass of, isolated neutron stars using astrometric microlensing. Credits Illustration: NASA, STScI, Ralf Crawford (STScI)



Astronomers have long known that neutron stars, the crushed cores left behind after massive stars explode, should be scattered throughout the Milky Way galaxy. However, most of them are effectively invisible. A new study published in Astronomy and Astrophysics suggests NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope could spot them anyway.

Using detailed simulations of the Milky Way and Roman’s future observations, researchers showed the flagship observatory may be able to identify and characterize dozens of isolated neutron stars through a subtle effect called gravitational microlensing.

“Most neutron stars are relatively dim and on their own,” said Zofia Kaczmarek of Heidelberg University in Germany, who led the study. “They are incredibly hard to spot without some sort of help.”

Finding what’s invisible

Neutron stars pack more mass than the Sun into a sphere about the size of a city. Studying them helps us understand how stars live, die, and spread heavy elements throughout the universe. They also provide a chance to study what happens under the most extreme conditions (pressures and densities) imaginable.

Yet, unless they are pulsars that beam in radio wavelengths or glow in X-rays, they can remain hidden from even the most powerful telescopes.

Roman can search for them in a different way. When a massive object like a neutron star moves in front of a distant background star, its intense gravity warps spacetime and deflects the background star’s light. This microlensing effect briefly makes the background star brighter and appear offset from its true position in the sky.

While many telescopes can detect the temporary brightening, Roman can measure both the brightening (photometry) and the tiny positional shift (astrometry) of the lensed star with exceptional precision.

Because neutron stars are relatively massive, they produce a larger astrometric signal than lighter objects, allowing missions like Roman to not only detect them, but also weigh them in some cases, something that is nearly impossible with photometry alone.

“What’s really cool about using microlensing is that you can get direct mass measurements,” said paper co-author Peter McGill of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. “Photometry tells us that something passed in front of the star, but it’s the amount the star’s position shifts that tells us how massive that object is. By measuring that tiny deflection on the sky, we can directly weigh something that is otherwise unseen.”

Roman’s measurements could help astronomers determine whether there is a true gap between the masses of neutron stars and black holes and how fast neutron stars are moving.

Scientists are particularly interested in understanding the powerful “kicks” neutron stars receive when they are born in supernova explosions. These kicks can send them racing through the galaxy at hundreds of miles per second.

Huge surveys, high chance of payoff

The research team will utilize Roman’s future Galactic Bulge Time Domain Survey, which will monitor millions of stars at a time in vast images of the sky, taken at a high frequency.

“We’re going to get to work as soon as the data start coming in,” said McGill. “Even in the first months after commissioning, we expect to start identifying promising events.”

Even a relatively small number of confirmed detections could significantly improve models of stellar explosions and extreme matter.

“We don’t know the mass distribution of neutron stars, black holes, or where one ends and the other begins with any certainty,” McGill said. “Roman will really be a breakthrough in that.”

Although only a few thousand neutron stars have been detected so far, mostly as pulsars, scientists estimate there could be tens of millions to hundreds of millions in the Milky Way. Additionally, to date, researchers have only been able to measure the masses of neutron stars in binary pairings.

“We’re seeing a small sample that’s not representative of the big picture,” Kaczmarek said. “Even a single mass measurement would be very powerful. If we found just one isolated neutron star, it would already be incredibly stimulating to our research.”

Looking ahead

The study also highlights a creative use of the mission’s capabilities. While Roman’s survey is designed primarily to find exoplanets using photometric microlensing, its powerful astrometric capabilities open the door to entirely new discoveries with astrometric microlensing.

“This wasn’t part of the original plan,” said McGill. “But it turns out Roman’s astrometric capability is really good at detecting neutron stars and black holes, so we can add a whole new kind of science to Roman’s surveys.”

If the predictions hold true, the mission could provide the first large sample of isolated neutron stars discovered through their gravity alone, revealing a hidden population that has remained out of reach until now. Roman is expected to transform the study of microlensing and the hidden populations of objects in our galaxy, from rogue exoplanets to stellar remnants like neutron stars.

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




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Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore

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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Is the Large Magellanic Cloud a First-Time Visitor?

Artist's image of the LMC and Milky Way and their associated coronas.
Credit: NASA, ESA, Leah Hustak (STScI)

Our most massive satellite galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), has been the center of a heated debate in the astrophysics community over the last few years. That debate centers on whether this is the LMC’s first or second “pass” by the Milky Way itself - and it has huge implications for the evolution of our galaxy given the disruption such a large grouping of stars has. A new paper from Scott Lucchini, Jiwon Jesse Han, Sapna Mishra, and Andrew J. Fox and his co-authors, currently available in pre-print on arXiv, provides what they claim to be definitive evidence that this is, in fact, the first time LMC has encountered the Milky Way. To understand the debate, it’s best to look at its history. For decades, there was an ongoing debate about the orbital path of the LMC. The discussion centered around a collisionless N-body dynamics model that tracked stars and their gravity. But back in 2024, physicist Eugene Vasiliev released a stunning paper that presented an argument that the LMC might have first passed the Milky Way 6-8 billion years ago at a distance of roughly 100 kiloparsecs.

Upon release of that paper, the debate was reignited. Vasiliev posited that, if the Milky Way’s dark energy halo was anisotropic (meaning the velocities of dark matter particles are skewed in certain directions), the current speed and position of the LMC would align perfectly with a “second pass” orbit. Dr. Lucchini and his co-authors are firmly on the other side of that argument.

Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC)
Anton Petrov discusses the Large Magellanic cloud and what it means for the future of our own galaxy.
Credit - Anton Petrov YouTube Channel

They released two papers directly tackling the idea. First was paper tracing trajectories of “hypervelocity stars” that had been previously ejected by the LMC’s central black hole. They found that the stellar dynamics of these fast-moving stellar objects aligned with both a first pass and second pass model. In other words, it did nothing to settle the argument.

So they began looking for a second, more definitive option. That option presented itself through an unexpected avenue - hydrodynamics. Using a software simulation package known as GIZMO, they combined rigid, analytical dark matter models of both the LMC and Milky way with “live” gas particles representing the mediums surrounding the two galaxies. Once they ran the simulations, they used another software package called Trident to generate mocked up data that would be expected in the ultraviolet spectroscopic observations of the simulated gas.

After they had their simulated data, they began to compare it to observational data - specifically Carbon IV and Hydrogen II absorption data from background quasars, located past the LMC itself. The results were conclusive - the simulation beautifully reproduced the observed velocity and column density profiles of the modern LMC. Just as conclusively, the model of a second-pass does not fit as well. Specifically, the LMC’s time spent “swimming” through the Milky Way’s gas in this scenario results in a much smaller “corona” - the massive halo of warm, ionizing gas surrounding the galaxy.

Video describing how the LMC could survive a collision with the Milky Way’s halo.
Credit - European Space Agency YouTube Channel

While those results seem very cut and dry, there are a few simplifications the authors took in the interest of saving computing capacity. The Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) was completely excluded from the simulation, and it actually contributes a majority of the neutral gas in the Magellanic Streams that both galaxies trail. Ignoring this could significantly alter the gas profile, the authors note. Also, the simulations massively simplified the Corona itself, using a warm-hot, single-phase model instead of the massively complicated multi-phase reality - largely in a nod to saving computational power.

Ultimately, these two papers together offer a brilliant tie-breaker in this debate. However, they weren’t the only ones contributing to the debate. A few weeks before these two papers were released, an independent team utilizing the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam published a paper that showcased stars sitting around 30kpc out in the Milky Way’s halo. This tidal debris aligns well with Vasiliev’s second-passage model, and is recent enough that the other side of the debate hasn’t yet had time to process counter arguments.

In other words, it's still not clear whether or not this is our first rodeo with the Large Magellanic Cloud. Hopefully upcoming missions, such as NASA’s Aspera mission, will allow us to look directly at the morphology and distribution of the Magellanic gas more closely. But until then, the debate will continue in the pages of academic journals.




Learn More:

S. Lucchini et al. -
The LMC Corona Favors a First Passage

S. Lucchini & J.J. Han - Threading the Magellanic Needle: Hypervelocity Stars Trace the Past Location of the LMC

UT - Our Galaxy Has a Hot Side and Now We Know Why

UT - The Large Magellanic Cloud Survived its Closest Approach to the Milky Way



Andy Tomaswick 

Andy Tomaswick

Andy has been interested in space exploration ever since reading Pale Blue Dot in middle school. An engineer by training, he likes to focus on the practical challenges of space exploration, whether that's getting rid of perchlorates on Mars or making ultra-smooth mirrors to capture ever clearer data. When not writing or engineering things he can be found entertaining his four children, six cats, and two dogs, or running in circles to stay in shape.