Articles in 2024

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  • Decametre radio observations are challenging due to the presence of the ionosphere. Here Groeneveld et al. present a strategy to correct for the ionosphere that allows them to make sharp decametre radio images from the ground with the LOFAR telescope.

    • C. Groeneveld
    • R. J. van Weeren
    • H. J. A. Röttgering
    Article
  • Phase-resolved mid-infrared observations from JWST of the hot gas giant WASP-43b detect a day–night difference of 659 ± 19 K. Comparison with climate models shows that the observations are compatible with cloudy skies, at least on the nightside, and the lack of methane detection suggests the presence of disequilibrium chemistry.

    • Taylor J. Bell
    • Nicolas Crouzet
    • Sebastian Zieba
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Cassini tracking data yield a lower Love number for Titan than previous analysis. This result is compatible with a low-density internal ocean that might consist of a mix of water and ammonia.

    • Sander Goossens
    • Bob van Noort
    • Wouter van der Wal
    Article
  • Simulated close encounters between planetary systems and other stars reveal that outer giant planets on wide orbits tend to be ejected, with a fraction of them forming bound pairs. This scenario would lead to a population of free-floating binary planets in dense stellar environments

    • Yihan Wang
    • Rosalba Perna
    • Zhaohuan Zhu
    Article
  • JWST observations of GRB 221009A reveal the associated supernova, confirming that the GRB resulted from the collapse of a rapidly rotating massive star. The lack of r-process emission suggests that these extreme events are not key sources of the heaviest elements.

    • Peter K. Blanchard
    • V. Ashley Villar
    • S. Karthik Yadavalli
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The Vesta anorthosite meteorite discovery suggests Vesta experienced a lunar magma ocean-like process. Anorthite formed during magma crystallization could have floated to the surface of Vesta, creating a primary anorthositic crust.

    • Shijie Li
    • Dongliang Zhang
    • Mingbao Li
    Article
  • Radio pulses from a rare, radio-loud magnetar, XTE J1810−197, are seen to have undergone a conversion in their polarization state. This change can be linked to the magnetar’s magnetic field geometry, and has commonalities with an effect also seen in fast radio bursts.

    • Marcus E. Lower
    • Simon Johnston
    • Benjamin W. Stappers
    ArticleOpen Access
  • A state-of-the-art simulation reveals that the long-lasting 10 MK plasma in solar active regions can be heated by magnetic reconnections driven by continuous flux emergence that repeatedly deposit impulsive heating into the coronal plasma.

    • Zekun Lu
    • Feng Chen
    • Xin Cheng
    Article
  • A radio-loud magnetar, XTE J1810–197, has been observed to precess shortly after an X-ray outburst. The precession decayed over the subsequent few months, which probably rules out freely precessing magnetars as the source of the fast radio bursts.

    • Gregory Desvignes
    • Patrick Weltevrede
    • Jérôme Pétri
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Micrometeorite impacts are an important process in forming several Ti oxides, including rutile (TiO2) and new Ti minerals (trigonal Ti2O and triclinic Ti2O). These Ti oxides can alter the photocatalytic properties and reflectance spectra of regolith on the Moon and other airless planetary bodies in the Solar System.

    • Xiaojia Zeng
    • Yanxue Wu
    • Jianzhong Liu
    Article
  • Ten stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud exhibit very low elemental abundances, suggesting that they have experienced enrichment by the earliest generations of stars only. These stars provide a window into a distant region of the high-redshift universe.

    • Anirudh Chiti
    • Mohammad Mardini
    • Joshua D. Simon
    Article