• RSS
  • Submit a Guest Post
  • Undergraduates: Submit your Research!
  • Suggest a Paper Topic!
astrobites
  • About
    • About Astrobites
    • Meet the Authors
    • Statement of Inclusivity
    • Copyright & Permissions
  • Latest Research
    • Daily Paper Summaries
    • Classics
    • Undergrad Research
    • Physical Review Coverage
  • Beyond astro-ph
    • Beyond astro-ph Library
    • Interviews
    • Career Navigation
    • Personal Experiences
    • Current Events
    • Teaching with Astrobites
  • Guides
    • EM Spectrum
    • Galaxies & AGNs
    • Spectroscopy and Spectral Lines
    • Adaptive Optics
    • Gravitational Waves
    • Transient Astronomy
    • Astrophysical Software
    • Graduate School
    • Writing a personal statement for grad apps
    • First Observing Run
    • …More Guides!
Select Page
Dark Matter Annihilation is for WIMPs

Dark Matter Annihilation is for WIMPs

by Annelia Anderson | Feb 8, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries, PRJ

Today’s paper searches for signatures of annihilating dark matter in the Milky Way’s satellite dwarf galaxies.

Fueling or Starving? The Role of Gas Flows in Early Galaxy Evolution

Fueling or Starving? The Role of Gas Flows in Early Galaxy Evolution

by Lucie Rowland | Feb 7, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries

Today’s bite explores whether early galaxies are fueling up or blowing off steam—are they gaining gas or losing it to stellar feedback?

No horsing around: Centaurus A could be a nearby cosmic ray factory

No horsing around: Centaurus A could be a nearby cosmic ray factory

by Samantha Wong | Feb 6, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries, PRJ

Today’s authors try to answer a century-old mystery: where are all the cosmic rays coming from??

Black Holes Grow Better With A Friend

Black Holes Grow Better With A Friend

by Nathalie Korhonen Cuestas | Feb 5, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries

Observations of dwarf galaxies, similar to early universe galaxies, show that a buddy galaxy can help trigger phases of rapid growth. That’s the power of friendship!

Finding “Scary Barbie”’s sisters: a new sample of ambiguous nuclear transients

Finding “Scary Barbie”’s sisters: a new sample of ambiguous nuclear transients

by Will Golay | Feb 4, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries

Supermassive black holes are responsible for the most luminous single-event flares in the universe. Learn how we search for these ultra-energetic events.

A Miss from Gravitational Waves Off the Top Rope!

A Miss from Gravitational Waves Off the Top Rope!

by Erica Sawczynec | Feb 1, 2025 | Daily Paper Summaries, PRJ

In today’s bite we watch gravitational waves come for one of astronomy’s top 5 ops: the standard cosmological model of the universe.

« Older Entries
Next Entries »

Loading

Follow our socials

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS Feed

More Posts About

AAS AGN astronomy astrophysics binary stars black holes cosmology dark matter dwarf galaxies exoplanets galaxies galaxy evolution gravitational waves habitability JWST Kepler Milky Way observations planetary science planet formation protoplanetary disks radio astronomy simulations solar system spectroscopy star formation stars stellar evolution supernovae theory

Posts by Category

  • Accessibility
  • Applications
  • Beyond
  • Book Reviews
  • Career Navigation
  • Classics
  • Climate Change
  • Course Assignments
  • Crossposts
  • Current Events
  • Daily Paper Summaries
  • Game Reviews
  • Guides
  • Historical Astronomy
  • Instrumentation
  • Interviews
  • Outreach
  • Personal Experiences
  • PRJ
  • Quick Notes
  • Satellites
  • Teaching
  • Undergraduate Research

More Astronomy

  • AAS
  • AAS Nova
  • astro-ph
  • AstroBetter
  • APOD

Read Astrobites in Other Languages

  • Astrobitos (Spanish)
  • Astropontos (Portuguese)
  • staryab (Farsi)

Listen to Astrobites

  • astro[sound]bites

Discover More Incredible Science

  • ScienceBites Network
  • RSS

© 2026 Astrobites | All Rights Reserved | Supported by AAS | Designed by Elegant Themes | Powered by WordPress