Wednesday, June 10, 2026

On The Hunt For Cosmic Dawn And The Universe’s Very First Stars

Some of the earliest galaxies that cosmologists have yet to detect. Credit: ESA/Hubble, NASA, HST Frontier Fields.

After decades of searches, cosmologists are within reach of finding cosmic dawn. A longtime observational cosmologist explains.



David Kipping Has a New Take on the Existence of Advanced Life in the Universe... and the Numbers are Not Encouraging!

The Cosmological Hart-Tipler Conjecture offers a new take on "Where is Everybody?" Credit: NASA

DOI: 10.48550/arXiv.2606.04044



This is How Supermassive Black Holes Feed Themselves

This composite image of NGC 4696 in the Centaurus Cluster contains data from the Hubble, the Chandra X-ray telescope, and the JST. In new research, the JWST showed that an unusual swirl within the sphere of influence of the galaxy's SMBH is connected to a larger network of gaseous filaments. This could be the missing link between black hole accretion and the flow of cool gas that feeds it. Image Credit: Hlavacek-Larrondo et al. 2026.

Astronomers may have found the missing link in the SMBH feeding process. New observations with the JWST show that a galaxy's circumnuclear disk, which feeds gas into its black hole, is connected to a much larger network of filaments. Cool gas flows through these filaments into the SMBH's sphere of influence.



Astronomers Find a Four-Carbon Sugar in Deep Space

The IRAM telescope that was used for part of the study. Credit - IRAM-gre/Wikimedia Commons

The space between stars may seem like a barren desert, but over the past few decades scientists have been finding all sorts of interesting chemicals in it. From the precursors to proteins to the building blocks of cell membranes, there has been discovery after discovery of new molecules in the giant gas clouds between the stars. Now, a new paper available in pre-print on arXiv details the discovery of the first ever four-carbon sugar in the Interstellar Medium (ISM), and it is another brick on the path to understanding how life on Earth first developed.



Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Orbiting Stars Give Clues to a Quiescent Black Hole's Mass

A JWST image of the highly distorted red galaxy MRG-M0138 seen through a foreground cluster of galaxies (white sources). Via the phenomenon of gravitational lensing, the same background galaxy is multiply imaged four times. Courtesy: NASA/JWST

How do you measure the mass of a dormant black hole in the early Universe? That's a question astronomers at University College London (UCL) and Carnegie scientists wanted to answer about a distant object that is invisible. So, they turned to James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) studies of the region around the black hole to find that answer.



Neptune’s Weirdest Moon Nereid Might Be the Lone Survivor of an Ancient "Moonpocalypse"

Our best ever image of Nereid, taken by the Voyager 2 probe in 1989. Credit - NASA/JPL

Neptune is definitely the odd one out of the gas giants. It’s tilted at a strange angle, and its moons are completely different from any other gas giant we know of. A new paper, published in Science Advances from researchers at CalTech, posits that might be because Triton, by far Neptune’s largest moon, absolutely obliterated the regular moon system it previously had, except for one particular exception - Nereid.



Monday, June 8, 2026

Space Telescopes Are Now Overwhelmed by Satellite Trails

Images of Starlink satellite trails at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory. Credit - CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/DECam DELVE Survey

Unfortunately there’s more bad news to report on the clear skies front. A new paper, available in pre-print on arXiv from researchers at NASA’s Ames Research Center, reports that 73.3% of images the agency’s new SPHEREx space telescope collected between May and September of last year were contaminated by at least one artificial satellite trail. And it’s only going to get worse from here.