
X-rays have revealed a mysterious cosmic object never before seen in our galaxy
After the initial discovery, we began follow-up observations using telescopes around the world, hoping to catch more pulses. With continued monitoring, we found the radio pulses from ASKAPJ1832 arrive regularly — every 44 minutes. This confirmed it as a new member of the rare long-period transient group.
In a new study published today in Nature, we report the discovery of a new long-period transient — and, for the first time, one that also emits regular bursts of X-rays.
Long-period transients are a recently identified class of cosmic objects that emit bright flashes of radio waves every few minutes to several hours. This is much longer than the rapid pulses we typically detect from dead stars such as pulsars.
What these objects are, and how they generate their unusual signals, remains a mystery.
Our discovery opens up a new window into the study of these puzzling sources. But it also deepens the mystery: the object we found doesn't resemble any known type of star or system in our galaxy – or beyond.
Watching the radio sky for flickers
There's much in the night sky that we can't see with human eyes but can detect when we look at other wavelengths, such as radio emissions.
Our research team regularly scans the radio sky using the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP), operated by CSIRO on Wajarri Yamaji Country in Western Australia. Our goal is to find cosmic objects that appear and disappear (known as transients).
Transients are often linked to some of the most powerful and dramatic events in the universe, such as the explosive deaths of stars.
In late 2023, we spotted an extremely bright source, named ASKAP J1832-0911 (based on its position in the sky), in the direction of the galactic plane. This object is located about 15,000 light years away. This is far, but still within the Milky Way.
A dramatic event
After the initial discovery, we began follow-up observations using telescopes around the world, hoping to catch more pulses. With continued monitoring, we found the radio pulses from ASKAPJ1832 arrive regularly — every 44 minutes. This confirmed it as a new member of the rare long-period transient group.
But we did not just look forward in time — we also looked back. We searched through older telescope data from the same part of the sky. We found no trace of the object before the discovery.
This suggests something dramatic happened shortly before we first detected it — something powerful enough to suddenly switch the object 'on'.
Then, in February 2024, ASKAPJ1832 became extremely active. After a quieter period in January, the source brightened dramatically. Fewer than 30 objects in the sky have ever reached such brightness in radio waves.
For comparison, most stars we detect in radio are about 10,000 times fainter than ASKAPJ1832 during that flare-up.
A lucky break
X-rays are a form of light that we can't see with our eyes. They usually come from extremely hot and energetic environments. Although about 10 similar radio-emitting objects have been found so far, none had ever shown X-ray signals.
In March, we tried to observe ASKAPJ1832 in X-rays. However, due to technical issues with the telescope, the observation could not go ahead.
Then came a stroke of luck. In June, I reached out to my friend Tong Bao, a postdoctoral researcher at the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics, to check if any previous X-ray observations had captured the source. To our surprise, we found two past observations from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, although the data were still under a proprietary period (not yet public).
We contacted Kaya Mori, a research scientist at Columbia University and the principal investigator of those observations. He generously shared the data with us. To our amazement, we discovered clear X-ray signals coming from ASKAPJ1832. Even more remarkable: the X-rays followed the same 44-minute cycle as the radio pulses.
It was a truly lucky break. Chandra had been pointed at a different target entirely, but by pure coincidence, it caught ASKAPJ1832 during its unusually bright and active phase.
A chance alignment like that is incredibly rare — like finding a needle in a cosmic haystack.
Still a mystery
Having both radio and X-ray bursts is a common trait of dead stars with extremely strong magnetic fields, such as neutron stars (high-mass dead stars) and white dwarfs (low-mass dead stars).
Our discovery suggests that at least some long-period transients may come from these kinds of stellar remnants.
But ASKAPJ1832 does not quite fit into any known category of object in our galaxy. Its behaviour, while similar in some ways, still breaks the mould.
We need more observations to truly understand what is going on. It is possible that ASKAPJ1832 is something entirely new, or it could be emitting radio waves in a way we have never seen before. DM

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Daily Maverick
a day ago
- Daily Maverick
X-rays have revealed a mysterious cosmic object never before seen in our galaxy
After the initial discovery, we began follow-up observations using telescopes around the world, hoping to catch more pulses. With continued monitoring, we found the radio pulses from ASKAPJ1832 arrive regularly — every 44 minutes. This confirmed it as a new member of the rare long-period transient group. In a new study published today in Nature, we report the discovery of a new long-period transient — and, for the first time, one that also emits regular bursts of X-rays. Long-period transients are a recently identified class of cosmic objects that emit bright flashes of radio waves every few minutes to several hours. This is much longer than the rapid pulses we typically detect from dead stars such as pulsars. What these objects are, and how they generate their unusual signals, remains a mystery. Our discovery opens up a new window into the study of these puzzling sources. But it also deepens the mystery: the object we found doesn't resemble any known type of star or system in our galaxy – or beyond. Watching the radio sky for flickers There's much in the night sky that we can't see with human eyes but can detect when we look at other wavelengths, such as radio emissions. Our research team regularly scans the radio sky using the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP), operated by CSIRO on Wajarri Yamaji Country in Western Australia. Our goal is to find cosmic objects that appear and disappear (known as transients). Transients are often linked to some of the most powerful and dramatic events in the universe, such as the explosive deaths of stars. In late 2023, we spotted an extremely bright source, named ASKAP J1832-0911 (based on its position in the sky), in the direction of the galactic plane. This object is located about 15,000 light years away. This is far, but still within the Milky Way. A dramatic event After the initial discovery, we began follow-up observations using telescopes around the world, hoping to catch more pulses. With continued monitoring, we found the radio pulses from ASKAPJ1832 arrive regularly — every 44 minutes. This confirmed it as a new member of the rare long-period transient group. But we did not just look forward in time — we also looked back. We searched through older telescope data from the same part of the sky. We found no trace of the object before the discovery. This suggests something dramatic happened shortly before we first detected it — something powerful enough to suddenly switch the object 'on'. Then, in February 2024, ASKAPJ1832 became extremely active. After a quieter period in January, the source brightened dramatically. Fewer than 30 objects in the sky have ever reached such brightness in radio waves. For comparison, most stars we detect in radio are about 10,000 times fainter than ASKAPJ1832 during that flare-up. A lucky break X-rays are a form of light that we can't see with our eyes. They usually come from extremely hot and energetic environments. Although about 10 similar radio-emitting objects have been found so far, none had ever shown X-ray signals. In March, we tried to observe ASKAPJ1832 in X-rays. However, due to technical issues with the telescope, the observation could not go ahead. Then came a stroke of luck. In June, I reached out to my friend Tong Bao, a postdoctoral researcher at the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics, to check if any previous X-ray observations had captured the source. To our surprise, we found two past observations from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, although the data were still under a proprietary period (not yet public). We contacted Kaya Mori, a research scientist at Columbia University and the principal investigator of those observations. He generously shared the data with us. To our amazement, we discovered clear X-ray signals coming from ASKAPJ1832. Even more remarkable: the X-rays followed the same 44-minute cycle as the radio pulses. It was a truly lucky break. Chandra had been pointed at a different target entirely, but by pure coincidence, it caught ASKAPJ1832 during its unusually bright and active phase. A chance alignment like that is incredibly rare — like finding a needle in a cosmic haystack. Still a mystery Having both radio and X-ray bursts is a common trait of dead stars with extremely strong magnetic fields, such as neutron stars (high-mass dead stars) and white dwarfs (low-mass dead stars). Our discovery suggests that at least some long-period transients may come from these kinds of stellar remnants. But ASKAPJ1832 does not quite fit into any known category of object in our galaxy. Its behaviour, while similar in some ways, still breaks the mould. We need more observations to truly understand what is going on. It is possible that ASKAPJ1832 is something entirely new, or it could be emitting radio waves in a way we have never seen before. DM

TimesLIVE
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Astronomers spot galaxy shaped like the Milky Way but much bigger
Astronomers have observed a galaxy dating to an earlier epoch in the universe's history that surprisingly is shaped much like our Milky Way - a spiral structure with a straight bar of stars and gas running through its centre- but much bigger, offering new insight into galactic formation. The distant galaxy, called J0107a, was observed as it appeared 11.1-billion years ago, when the universe was about a fifth of its age today. The researchers used data from the Chile-based Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (Alma) and Nasa's James Webb Space Telescope to study the galaxy. They determined the galaxy's mass, including its stars and gas, was more than 10 times greater than that of the Milky Way, and it was forming stars at an annual rate about 300 times greater. J0107a was, however, more compact than the Milky Way. "The galaxy is a monster galaxy with a high star formation rate and plenty of gas, much more than present day galaxies," said astronomer Shuo Huang of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, lead author of the study published this week in the journal Nature. "The discovery," said study co-author Toshiki Saito, an astronomer at Shizuoka University in Japan, "raises the important question: How did such a massive galaxy form in such an early universe"? While a few galaxies undergoing star formation at a similar rate to J0107a exist in today's universe, almost all are in the process of a galactic merger or collision. There was no sign of such circumstances involving this galaxy. J0107a and the Milky Way have some commonalities.


eNCA
15-05-2025
- eNCA
Ancient reptile tracks rewrite when animals conquered land
PARIS - After a brief rain in part of the ancient supercontinent of Gondwana 350 million years ago, a reptile pressed its small claws into the still-wet ground. Its tracks, which have been discovered in Australia, mean it is the oldest-known vertebrate animal to have permanently abandoned the oceans for dry land, a study suggested on Wednesday. It also significantly pushes back the date for when these four-limbed pioneers made this important evolutionary step that would eventually lead to humans conquering the globe. The tracks were found by amateur archaeologists on a 30-centimetre-wide sandstone slab in a mountainous area of the southeastern Australian state of Victoria. First there was a single footprint of an unknown animal which has "raindrop pockmarks all over it," Per Ahlberg, a palaeontologist at Sweden's Uppsala University, told AFP. This suggests it was made before the brief shower, said the senior author of a new Nature study describing the discovery. Then there were two sets of tracks from after the rain. The second set of tracks suggests this reptile ancestor "was in more of a hurry", he added. "You see the claws making long scratches on the ground." - 'Keyholes' into 'lost world' - The researchers cannot determine whether both sets of tracks were made by the same individual animal, but Ahlberg thinks this is unlikely. The animal was 60-80 centimetres long and would have looked "quite lizard-like", he added. That the animal had claws is a clear sign it was an amniote, a group of animals which today includes mammals, birds and reptiles. Its ancestor tetrapods -- notable for their four limbs -- split into two groups, amniotes and amphibians. While amphibians had to return to water to lay their eggs, amniotes evolved to have eggs strong enough to survive on land, shedding its last connection to water life. The discovery indicates that amniotes existed 35 to 40 million years earlier than previously thought, during the turn of the Devonian and Carboniferous periods, the study said. This suggests the "water-to-land-dwelling transition" may have taken place in just 50 million years, much quicker than had been believed, Stuart Sumida of California State University commented in Nature. That would be just the latest twist in the tale of how animals rose from the ocean to dominate the land. "The only way to ever understand it is to look through these tiny little keyholes that we find into this strange, dark, lost world," Ahlberg said.