Friday, May 1, 2026

Radio Telescope Array Reveals the Masses of Hidden Young Stars

An artist's impression of two young stars dancing together in their Orion Nebula birthplace. They're hidden by clouds of gas and dust but radio telescopes can pierce those clouds to allow astronomers to study them in detail. Courtesy NSF/VLBA/NRAO

The Orion Nebula provides a master class in the study of newly born stars as the closest starbirth region to us. Yet, many of its youngest ones are still swaddled in their birth creches, hidden by clouds of gas and dust. The Very Large Baseline Array (VLBA) radio telescopes have managed to punch through the dusty obscuring veil to study a pair of young binary systems called Brun 656 and HD 294300 born in the Nebula.



Thursday, April 30, 2026

What is the Most Common Type of Planet in the Galaxy?

The fully integrated Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), which launched in 2018 to find thousands of new planets orbiting other stars (Credit : Orbital ATK / NASA)

Astronomers now believe there is at least one planet for every star in the Milky Way but new research has revealed a deeply unsettling twist in that picture. The most common planets in our Galaxy, it turns out, are almost entirely absent around the most common stars. Using data from NASA's TESS satellite, researchers found that the small, faint stars that make up the vast majority of the Milky Way seem to host rocky super Earths in abundance, but virtually no sub Neptunes, the planet type previously thought to be plentiful. The finding doesn't just refine existing theories of planet formation, it rewrites them.



What does it take to call home from the Moon?

The Apollo 11 lunar landing module "Eagle," with astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin aboard. The telemetry system used during the Apollo missions was slow and inefficient unlike the new laser system used on Artemis (Credit : NASA)

When NASA's Artemis II crew swung around the Moon in April, the world watched in extraordinary detail and a breakthrough laser communications system was the reason why. Bolted to the outside of the Orion capsule, a compact optical terminal beamed 484 gigabytes of data back to Earth using invisible infrared light, outpacing traditional radio systems by a factor of tens. The result was some of the most vivid imagery ever captured in deep space, and a technology demonstration that will fundamentally change how humanity communicates beyond Earth.



How Do Close Binary Stars Form?

Artist's rendition of the birth of twin stars in the HOPS-312 system. Credit - NSF/AUI/NSF NRAO/B. Saxton

Our Sun is a bit of an outlier in the general stellar population. We typically think of stars as being solitary wanderers throughout the galaxy. But roughly half of Sun-like stars are locked in with more than one companion star. If there are two, it’s known as a “binary” system, but in many cases there are even more stars all collectively tied together by gravity. Astronomers have long debated why this happens, and a new paper, available in pre-print on arXiv from Ryan Sponzilli, a graduate student at the University of Illinois, makes an argument for a mechanism known as disk fragmentation.



Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Is the Earliest Supermassive Black Hole Mystery Solved?

This galaxy, UHZ1, is 13.2 billion light-years away, seen when the universe was only 3% of its current age. NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and James Webb Space Telescope joined forces to make this discovery.This is considered the best evidence to date that some early black holes formed from massive clouds of gas. Courtesy NASA/Chandra

One of the most intriguing puzzles in cosmology is the existence of supermassive black holes that seem to appear very early in the history of the Universe. Astronomers keep finding them at times when, by all that they understand about the infant Universe, they shouldn't be there. The standard theory of black hole formation suggests that they shouldn't have had enough time to grow as massive as they appear to be. Yet, there they are, monster black holes with the mass of at least a billion suns. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has found a large population of them in early epochs, and they've been observed in very early quasars as well.



ESA’s Proba 3 is Unlocking Secrets of the Solar Wind

An artist's conception of Proba-3 in space. Credit: ESA/MediaLab.

It has been a dream of astronomers and solar scientists for ages. A new mission gives solar researchers a powerful new tool in their arsenal: on-demand, total solar eclipses. Launched in 2024, The European Space Agency’s Proba-3 mission has proven the feasibility of a free-flying, space-based coronagraph. Now, first science results from the mission are giving us a view of the origin of space weather. The results were recently published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.



Canada Proposes POET Mission to Hunt Earth-Sized Planets

Artist's illustration of an ultracool dwarf star and an orbiting exoplanet. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

Exoplanet science and the search for life beyond Earth continue to advance at break-neck speeds, with the number of confirmed exoplanets by NASA rapidly approaching 6,300, with 223 of those exoplanets being designated as terrestrial (rocky) exoplanets. With the promise of discovering an increasing number of Earth-sized exoplanets increasing every day, new telescopes from across the world have the opportunity to contribute to this incredible field.