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Upgraded Very Large Array Telescope Will Spot Baby Solar Systems—If It's Funded

Upgraded Very Large Array Telescope Will Spot Baby Solar Systems—If It's Funded

Yahoo28-05-2025
New Mexico's Plains of San Agustin are otherworldly: Silence, sand and sharp plants reign on the valley floor. Knobbly volcanic rock rises above. Pronghorns' legs and jackrabbits' ears break up the landscape.
And so, too, does one of the world's largest telescopes.
The plains house the aptly named Very Large Array (VLA)—a radio telescope made of 27 different antennas, each of which looks like a home satellite dish on steroids. In the otherwise empty desert, they spread into a Y shape that can extend 22 miles end-to-end. When the antennas are pointed at the same thing in the sky at the same time, they function together as one large telescope, simulating an instrument as wide as the distance between the dishes. In this case, then, images from the VLA have as much resolution as they would if it were a single telescope 22 miles wide: high definition, in other words. The VLA became iconic, and inspirational to a generation of astronomers, thanks to the movie Contact, in which Jodie Foster's character uses the array to hear an alien communication.
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The VLA's antennas, the true stars of the film, simultaneously look like they don't belong in the landscape and also like they've always been here. They haven't, of course, but their construction began in the 1970s, making the VLA the oldest instrument in the portfolio of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO). This federally-funded organization builds, maintains and operates radio telescopes that any astronomer—regardless of their institutional affiliation or citizenship—can apply to use.
But the VLA, now in its middle age, is due for a replacement. After all these decades, astronomers want something shiny, fully modern and more capable: a new build with all the bells and whistles rather than a charming old Colonial that's been remodeled piecemeal. NRAO is working on that, planning the VLA's proposed successor: the Next-Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA). (Astronomers may be scientifically creative, but they are linguistic straight shooters.)
On a Friday afternoon in late April, the organization gathered political leaders together, alongside scientists and engineers, to unveil a prototype antenna—one that will be cloned a couple of hundred times to make up the future ngVLA. It loomed on the plains just beyond the partygoers, standing alongside its predecessors, the old and the new in stereo with each other. 'The amount that technology has advanced since the VLA was created is amazing,' says Jill Malusky, NRAO's news and public information manager. 'A VLA antenna and an ngVLA antenna look very different because they are.'
Guests wandered near the antennas, checking out a spread of food that included a sculpture, made in the medium of watermelon, of a radio telescope antenna. A chamber quartet played in the background, a single fern fronting them, with an open bar lubricating the event. It was fancy—for science. But for astronomers, the ngVLA is a big deal, and the event was intended, in part, to bolster the political support needed to make it happen. At the moment, it's a proposed project—and still requires final funding. 'Having a physical antenna we can point to, and test, to prove the value of this project is such a milestone,' Malusky says. 'It makes it all more real.'
Representing an orders-of-magnitude improvement to the VLA that would complement other radio telescopes in the U.S. and abroad, the ambitious project has the enthusiastic yes of the astronomical community. But whether big-science telescopes, radio or otherwise, will survive the current funding environment remains a dark matter. That uncertainty is part of why NRAO's event elicited a spectrum of emotions for Malusky. 'It's a mix of excitement and trepidation,' she says. 'Can we get people invested in the potential of a major project that is still gathering resources and just over a decade to fruition?'
That Friday afternoon, Tony Beasley, director of NRAO, stood at the front of a hardy event tent and faced the prototype. Its dish was made up of shiny panels assembled into an octagon. From its bottom edge, supportive struts held up a secondary reflecting surface and a receiver (basically the radio version of an optical telescope's camera) that looked a bit like the spaceship Foster's character boarded in Contact.
The antenna, about as wide as a bowling lane is long, has been designed to collect radio waves from space—beamed from stars that are being born or dying, the stuff between stars, and more. As radio light comes in, it will hit the main dish and bounce up to the secondary reflector and then the receiver, which will catch the waves and turn them into digital signals that will then be sent to computers.
As a start, the prototype dish will hook up to VLA's aging ones and gather data alongside them—it will be an apprentice of sorts.
'You see one antenna out there,' said Beasley, directing the audience's attention beyond the tent, which was being shaken by the wind to such an extent that people also cast their eyes upward to assess its structural integrity. NRAO ultimately plans to build 262 more antennas and spread them across the U.S., with their numbers concentrated in the Southwest. Of those antennas, Beasley continued, '192 of them will be visible from where I'm standing right here.'
Together, the ngVLA's antennas could pick up a cell-phone signal from 500 billion kilometers (more than 310 billion miles) away (although that wouldn't be the most likely find). That means it could detect an Android embedded in the Oort Cloud, the collection of comets that makes up the outer part of the solar system. The future telescope's resolution should be high enough to pass a no-glasses eye exam in New York City if the chart of letters were placed in Los Angeles.
That precision gives it scientific latitude, allowing it to address some of astronomers' highest-priority questions, such as how planets come to be and how solar systems like ours form. 'You could, say, probe a cloud that is forming planets and find out where the planets are—like individual gaps in the cloud that the planets are carving out,' says David Kaplan, an astronomer and physics professor at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.
Of all the radio telescopes out there, the ngVLA would be the planetary 'flagship' for star and planet formation, Kaplan says. At high radio frequencies and big antenna separations, 'it would be the only game in town.'
The ngVLA will also look for the organic molecules and chemical conditions of new solar systems that might someday spur life. It will show how galaxies come together and evolve, use the Milky Way's center to test ideas about how gravity works and investigate how stars develop. And it will hunt black holes and their outbursts.
Given those varied abilities, the telescope was highly ranked in astronomers' 'decadal survey,' a yearslong process in which the astronomical community takes stock of its most valued scientific questions and assesses which future telescopes are best suited to find some answers. Funding from agencies such as the National Science Foundation (NSF), which bankrolls NRAO, typically follows the survey's recommendations.
The survey recommended the ngVLA as a top priority. 'It can change the landscape,' says Matt Dobbs, a physicist at McGill University, who studies the origin and evolution of the universe and worked on the survey alongside Kaplan.
NRAO hopes to start construction on the ngVLA in 2029, with initial operations beginning in 2033. The possibility is a bright spot for American radio astronomy. The VLA is more than 40 years old; the Green Bank Telescope, completed in 2001, is more than 20. And NRAO's latest instrument, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, opened 12 years ago.
The latter two, though not new, aren't going anywhere, as far as anyone knows. But they do different kinds of scientific analyses than the VLA does and the ngVLA will.
The new telescope does, though, have a whippersnapper nipping at its heels. Another future radio observatory, called the Deep Synoptic Array 2000 (DSA-2000), is planning an order of magnitude more dishes than the ngVLA—2,000 of them. But each will be only around 16 feet across, whereas ngVLA's dishes will measure 60 feet. DSA-2000 will also work at a different radio frequency range than the ngVLA.
DSA-2000's development is also moving faster than that of the VLA's successor, though, in large part, that is because the former has relied on private funding more than federal resources, as the ngVLA's prototyping has.
In taking a step back from dependence on the NSF, the DSA-2000 crew might be on to something. Just days before the ngVLA ceremony, the NSF canceled more than 400 active grants; one day before, the agency's then director Sethuraman Panchanathan resigned. 'This is a pivotal moment for our nation in terms of global competitiveness,' he said in his goodbye letter. 'NSF is an extremely important investment to make U.S. scientific dominance a reality. We must not lose our competitive edge.'
No one knows what the future of NSF-funded astronomy, let alone NSF-funded radio astronomy, looks like. President Donald Trump hasn't said much about that particular domain yet. But not building the ngVLA could put that edge in jeopardy.
Dobbs, though, holds out hope for the U.S.'s role in radio astronomy's future, in part because of the propulsion of its past.
'The United States has everything it needs to make that project a reality,' he adds. Whether it will do so, though, requires gathering more data from the future. After all, it's bad luck to count your antennas before they hatch.
Dobbs has been putting his focus on smaller radio telescopes, such as one called the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) and its successor, acronymed CHORD. Both map how hydrogen was distributed in the early universe and detect fast radio bursts. Their antennas are cheap(ish), their overall footprint small, and their ambition is limited to specific science—in this case, gas maps.
At the prototype-antenna unveiling, then, it made sense that there was a liminal feeling to what was otherwise a celebratory gathering. And it was conspicuous that representatives from NSF, the agency that would fund the telescope's construction and operation, weren't there, which Beasley said was the case 'for various reasons.'
Chris Smith, interim director of the NSF's division of astronomical sciences, did send a letter to be read to the wined-and-dined crowd. 'NSF funded this development not just to ensure the technical feasibility of the advanced capabilities of ngVLA,' he wrote. It also supported the prototype as 'a way of creating new innovations in the field of radio astronomy.'
And that may be true. But those who gathered at NRAO's event also hope, specifically, that the ngVLA, a receptacle for optimism about the future of radio astronomy in the U.S., will sprout from this dry ground.
'It starts with a single step,' Beasley said at the event—in this case, a single antenna.
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Four New Autism Subtypes Link Genes to Children's Traits
Four New Autism Subtypes Link Genes to Children's Traits

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time2 days ago

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Four New Autism Subtypes Link Genes to Children's Traits

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That's why researchers have spent decades trying to use genetics and behavioral characteristics to divide the spectrum into meaningful subtypes. The hope is that such subtypes can help guide care for autistic people and their families and reveal what causes different presentations of autism in the first place. Now, in a study published on Wednesday in Nature Genetics, researchers have bridged an important gap by connecting different clusters of behavioral and developmental traits with underlying genetic differences. By analyzing data from a group of 5,392 autistic children, they identified four distinct subtypes of autism, each with different kinds of challenges, that are connected to specific types of genetic variations. [Sign up for Today in Science, a free daily newsletter] 'For families navigating autism, understanding their child's specific subtype can provide greater clarity and open the door to more personalized care, support and connection,' says Natalie Sauerwald, co-lead author of the paper, who studies genomics at the Flatiron Institute in New York City. But it's not yet clear whether these four subtypes, which were identified with statistics in a nonrepresentative, largely white group of autistic kids, will be useful to help diagnose and care for autistic people in real-world clinical settings. When genetic sequencing of the human genome began in earnest in the 1990s, autism researchers hoped to identify the genetic cause—or more likely, causes—of the condition. 'Twenty years ago the geneticists were saying, 'We're not even going to need autism [as a diagnosis]; we're just going to have genetically defined disorders,'' says Catherine Lord, a psychologist specializing in autism at the University of California, Los Angeles. That hasn't come to pass. 'Autism genetics is very complex,' says the new study's co-lead author Aviya Litman, a genomics graduate student at Princeton University. Despite autism being between 60 and 80 percent heritable, it's hard to pin down a specific genetic cause for any one individual—the cause is only clear for about 20 percent of autistic people tested, Litman explains. Researchers have now identified hundreds of genes associated with autism, meaning that if an individual has certain genes, they have a much higher chance of being diagnosed as autistic. But even with this knowledge, scientists haven't been able to reliably connect how these genes translate to specific autistic traits and developmental trajectories. To bridge that gap, Litman, Sauerwald and their colleagues turned to data from a large study that tracked genetic information, traits and development of 5,392 autistic kids between the ages of four and 18. The researchers evaluated the young participants on social communication abilities, restrictive and repetitive behaviors, developmental milestones, and more. Using a computer model, statistical tests and clinical judgment, the team separated the participants into four robust groups based on patterns in their traits and development. Social and Behavioral Challenges: These kids, 37 percent of the participants, had more difficulty with social communication and restrictive and repetitive behaviors than other autistic children. They also had more challenges with disruptive behavior, attention and anxiety. These children, however, did not experience significant developmental delays. 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Rubin Observatory Data Flood Will Let the Universe Alert Astronomers 10 Million Times a Night
Rubin Observatory Data Flood Will Let the Universe Alert Astronomers 10 Million Times a Night

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time01-07-2025

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Rubin Observatory Data Flood Will Let the Universe Alert Astronomers 10 Million Times a Night

Bang! Whiz! Pop! The universe is a happening place—full of exploding stars, erupting black holes, zipping asteroids, and much more. And astronomers have a brand-new, superpowerful eye with which to see the changing cosmos: the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile. The Rubin Observatory released its first images last week, and they're stunning—vast, glittering star fields that show off the telescope's massive field of view and spectacularly deep vision. But two of the endeavor's most compelling aspects are difficult to convey in any individual image, no matter how spectacular: the sheer amount of data Rubin will produce and the speed with which those data will flood into astronomers' work. 'We can detect everything that changes, moves and appears,' says Yusra AlSayyad, an astronomer at Princeton University and Rubin's deputy associate director for data management. Any time something happens in Rubin's expansive view, the observatory will automatically alert scientists who may be interested in taking a closer look. The experience will be like receiving personalized notifications from the universe. [Sign up for Today in Science, a free daily newsletter] That sounds straightforward enough—until you hear the numbers. 'We're expecting approximately 10,000 alerts per image and 10 million alerts per night,' AlSayyad continues. 'It's way too much for one person to manually sift through and filter and monitor themselves.' AlSayyad compares Rubin's data stream to a dashcam or a video doorbell that constantly films everything in its view. 'You can't just sit there and watch it,' she says. 'In order to make use of that video feed, you need data management.' For Rubin, that means building a static image of the sky—a background template, so to speak—against which any changes will be easy to spot. The telescope will construct this static view within the first year or so of regular operations. Once the background image for a particular section of the sky is ready, the real flood will begin. As the telescope snaps its gigantic photographs, algorithms will first automatically correct for effects such as stray light from the sky and image-blurring atmospheric turbulence. Then the algorithms will compare those tweaked images with the static template, marking every little difference—an expected 10,000 in each snapshot. There will be approximately 1,000 images per night, night after night, for as long as Rubin remains in operations. Astronomers love data, but no one has that kind of time in a day. So each individual scientist (amateurs can sign up, too) must first enroll with the Rubin Observatory's so-called alert brokers. Users can request alerts about supernovae or asteroids, for example, then set constraints on just how interesting an event should be to trigger a notification. 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But many details will be worked out along the way, which will let them program the telescope to adapt to the astronomical community's interests, as well as any sudden celestial surprises. 'Ten years ago we were not really seriously thinking of gravitational-wave counterparts, which is all the rage today,' Bianco says. (These counterparts are the light-emitting sources of gravitational waves, the ripples in spacetime that scientists first measured in September 2015 using the twin Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors.) 'We truly believe that LSST itself will discover new things, will transform the way in which we think about the universe,' she adds. That means making the observatory responsive to the cosmos. 'If that is true, then we need to enable changes that allow us to capture these new physics, these new phenomena.' 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Researchers use that telltale effect to map the enigmatic substance's distribution across the universe. Decades ago Anthony Tyson, now an astrophysicist at the University of California Davis, wanted to do just that. 'I proposed a project to [what was then] the biggest telescope, the biggest camera that was in existence, and got turned down,' he recalls. In the long run, that failed proposal sent him down the path to build his own superlative telescope, which boasts the biggest digital camera in the world, at the Rubin Observatory, where he was founding director and is now chief scientist. In the short run, however, he took an approach that now seems prophetic. 'I decided maybe I should make another application to take the same data but for a different purpose,' he says. He and his colleagues wrote up a different proposal for the same telescope, this time pitching a study of radio-bright plasma jets emanating from around the supermassive black holes at the core of galaxies. 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Astronomers discover 'raw materials for life' can form in planetary systems even before stars
Astronomers discover 'raw materials for life' can form in planetary systems even before stars

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time01-07-2025

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Astronomers discover 'raw materials for life' can form in planetary systems even before stars

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Scientists are claiming a "cosmic chemistry breakthrough" following the discovery of a large "aromatic" molecule in deep space. The discovery suggests that these molecules could help seed planetary systems with carbon, supporting the development of molecules needed for life. The molecule, called cyanocoronene, belongs to a class of carbon-based organic compounds called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which are made up of multiple fused aromatic rings — structures in which electrons are shared across double-bonded carbon atoms, giving them unique chemical stability. "PAHs are thought to lock away a significant fraction of the universe's carbon and play a key role in the chemistry that leads to the formation of stars and planets," National Radio Astronomy Observatory representatives wrote in a statement. "Until now, only smaller PAHs had been detected in space, with this new discovery significantly pushing the known size limit." The scientists determined that cyanocoronene can form efficiently in the cold conditions of space through reactions between coronene and highly reactive cyanide radicals at low temperatures. "This means the chemistry that builds complex organics can happen even before stars are born," the researchers wrote, highlighting that such prebiotic molecules may be common ingredients in the early stages of star and planet formation. The cyanocoronene was identified by the Green Bank Telescope (GBT), part of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, in the Taurus Molecular Cloud (TMC-1). This star-forming region, located in the constellations Taurus and Auriga, is known for its rich and complex chemistry. The GBT — located in Green Bank, West Virginia — is the world's largest fully steerable radio telescope. Standing 485 feet (148 meters) tall with a dish 100 meters (330 feet) in diameter, the GBT is an essential tool for detecting faint radio signals from deep space, including those emitted by molecules like cyanocoronene. Unlike optical telescopes, which collect visible light, the GBT is designed to detect radio waves, a type of electromagnetic radiation with much longer wavelengths. These waves are often emitted by cold, dense regions of space, like the TMC-1, where new stars and complex organic molecules can form. To identify a specific molecule in space, scientists first measure its microwave spectrum in a laboratory. Each molecule has a unique "fingerprint" — a pattern of energy transitions that appears as lines in the radio spectrum. With this information in hand, scientists use the GBT to collect radio waves and look for a match. In the case of cyanocoronene, the researchers found multiple matching spectral lines in the GBT's data, confirming the presence of the molecule in TMC-1 with exceptional confidence far beyond the statistical chance that it would occur discovery opens the door for astronomers and astrochemists to search for even larger PAHs and related molecules. Scientists are now especially interested in how these structures evolve, fragment or interact with other molecules under the influence of ultraviolet light, cosmic rays and shocks in interstellar space. "Each new detection brings us closer to understanding the origins of complex organic chemistry in the universe — and perhaps, the origins of the building blocks of life themselves," Gabi Wenzel, a research scientist in the Department of Chemistry at MIT and the Harvard and Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and lead author of the research, said in the statement. The research was presented earlier this month at the 246th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Anchorage, Alaska.

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