(Press-News.org) New Haven, Conn. — Apples-to-apples comparisons in the distant universe are hard to come by.
Whether the subject is dwarf galaxies, supermassive black holes, or “hot Jupiters,” astronomers can spend months or years searching for comparable objects and formations to study. And it is rarer still when those objects are side-by-side.
But a new Yale study offers a road map for finding “twin” planetary systems — showing whether binary stars that orbit each other, and that were born at the same time and place, tend to host similar orbiting planets. The study’s authors found that certain orientations of twin star systems may provide critical information about planet formation, while also being easier for astronomers to discover planets within the systems.
The side-by-side, “edge on” configuration of certain binary star systems potentially allows astronomers to do comparative studies, in the same way that doctors study human twins to gain knowledge about biological and behavioral mechanisms.
“This could be an unprecedented avenue for examining how deterministic, or orderly, the process of planet formation is,” said Malena Rice, an assistant professor of astronomy in Yale’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences and senior author of the new study.
The study appears in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. The first author is Joseph Hand, an undergraduate at the University of Kansas who conducted the research as a Dorrit Hoffleit Undergraduate Research Scholar, a Yale fellowship named in honor of the longtime Yale astronomer. Konstantin Gerbig, a Ph.D. candidate in Yale’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, is co-author of the study.
In earlier work, Rice identified an unexpectedly large number of binary systems with orbits that are perfectly aligned, meaning that the two binary stars and their planets orbit on the same geometrical plane. In such systems, the companion star can serve as a stabilizer for the planets' orbits, preventing dramatic long-term climate variations that may otherwise be destructive to life as we know it.
These “edge-on” binary systems, because of their alignment, are also excellent candidates for the detection of new planets, according to the researchers: the stars wobble directly toward and away from Earth, creating a signal boost.
For the study, the team identified nearly 600 edge-on binary star systems based on data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia DR3 catalogue of high-precision stellar astrometry. Drawing from the Gaia dataset, the researchers found the brightest nearby binary star systems, measured their orbits, and simulated the set of expected planets waiting to be discovered orbiting each star.
The result, researchers say, is essentially a prediction for locations in the sky where planet-hunters are more likely to find new planets to identify and characterize — and, for the first time, to compare planets across stars in the same system.
“We outline how this could, for the first time, be used to conduct comparative studies of planet formation where we have a control sample — that is, a second planetary system born together with the first planetary system,” Rice said.
The work was funded by the Dorrit Hoffleit Undergraduate Research Scholarship program and support from the Heising-Simons Foundation.
# # #
END
[Strasbourg, 14 May 2025] The “How Equitable Is It?” tool, designed to assess the equity of scholarly communication models, has been officially launched today in its updated version following a comprehensive review of community feedback. Originally introduced as a beta version in September 2024 at the OASPA conference, this refined version of the tool incorporates significant improvements based on input from across the scholarly publishing ecosystem.
Developed by a multi-stakeholder Working Group, comprising librarians, ...
New data from a national project led by McGill University researchers shows that redesigning youth mental health services can significantly cut wait times and connect more young people to care.
The ACCESS Open Minds project was launched in 2014 to address gaps in access to quality mental health care, especially for Indigenous, remote and underserved communities. Findings published in Jama Psychiatry provide the first assessment of the program’s outcomes across Canada.
“We focused on transforming existing programs in clinics, schools and youth centres to make them more accessible, youth-friendly and culturally appropriate,” said ...
New research by ESMT Berlin and the Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH) shows that private equity (PE) acquisitions lead to substantial operational efficiency gains in hospitals, challenging common public concerns. The study reveals that hospitals acquired by PE firms significantly reduce costs and administrative staff without increasing closure rates or harming patient care.
The paper “Private Equity in the Hospital Industry” is co-authored by Merih Sevilir (ESMT and Halle Institute for Economic Research), Janet Gao (McDonough School of Business, Georgetown), and Yongseok Kim (Freeman School of Business, ...
Research Highlights:
The risk of death or complications from the stress-related heart condition associated with stressful events, such as the death of a loved one — called Takotsubo cardiomyopathy or broken heart syndrome — was high and unchanged from 2016 to 2020, according to data from a national study that included nearly 200,000 U.S. adults.
Takotsubo cardiomyopathy was found to be more common in women in this analysis. However, men with the condition were twice as likely to die.
The rate of complications, such as heart failure, atrial fibrillation, ...
Global warming is already very tough for animals in the wild, but it may be toughest for creatures like fish, whose body temperatures are controlled by the water temperatures around them.
Fish have to evolve to handle higher water temperatures, if they can’t move to areas with colder water. But what if adapting to warmer water has other unwanted consequences?
In a new publication in Nature Climate Change, researchers looked at zebrafish that they had specially bred over 7 generations to tolerate ...
Researchers at the University of Tokyo and their collaborators have developed a digital laboratory system that fully automates the material synthesis and the structural and physical property evaluation of thin-film samples. With the digital laboratory, or dLab, the team can autonomously synthesize thin-film samples and measure their material properties. The system demonstrates advanced automatic and autonomous material synthesis for data- and robot-driven materials science.
The current research is published in the journal Digital Discovery.
Machine learning, robotics and data are deemed vital to the discovery of ...
While breastfeeding has many benefits for a mother and her baby, it has one major drawback: It’s incredibly difficult to know how much milk the baby is consuming.
To take the guesswork out of breastfeeding, an interdisciplinary team of engineers, neonatologists and pediatricians at Northwestern University has developed a new wearable device that can provide clinical-grade, continuous monitoring of breast milk consumption.
The unobtrusive device softly and comfortably wraps around the breast ...
Osaka, Japan – Tissues consist of a heterogenous mixture of different cell types, complicating our understanding of their biological functions and studies of disease. Now, a multi-institutional team led by The University of Osaka has developed and provided proof-of-concept of a new technology to visualize the distribution of components within a single cell, paving the way for a much greater understanding of disease in complex biological samples.
t-SPESI (tapping-mode scanning probe electrospray ionization) is a technique that allows analysis of the spatial layout of molecules in a sample. Multiple micro-samples of different regions of ...
There is no significant difference in the effectiveness of how autistic and non-autistic people communicate, according to a new study, challenging the stereotype that autistic people struggle to connect with others.
The findings suggest that social difficulties often faced by autistic people are more about differences in how autistic and non-autistic people communicate, rather than a lack of social ability in autistic individuals, experts say.
Researchers hope the results of the study will help reduce the stigma surrounding autism, and lead to more effective ...
Paul Wilcox, a geologist at the University of Innsbruck, has discovered the first land-based evidence of meltwater pulses from the Cordilleran Ice Sheet during the last ice age about 20,000 years ago. The age of the cave sediments was constrained via optical dating techniques, which is crucial to help piece together the sequence of climate events leading to a warming planet. The results were published in the journal Nature Geoscience.
Around 20,000 years ago, the Cordilleran Ice Sheet in western North America reached its maximum extent. This was followed by warming climate conditions, causing the ice-sheet to melt. While it is generally accepted ...