PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle

2025-08-13
(Press-News.org)

One of the best places to study stars is inside “open clusters”, which are groups of stars that formed together from the same material and are bound together through gravity.

Open clusters act as laboratories, showing how stars of different masses and ages behave. At the same time, some stars known as “variable stars”, regularly change in brightness, and  their flickers and pulses help scientists learn about the physics inside stars and about the wider galaxy.

Until now, astronomers studied clusters and variable stars separately, and usually one cluster at a time. But that approach missed the bigger picture, leaving gaps in our understanding of how the lives of stars unfold across the galaxy.

Now, Richard I. Anderson, head of the Standard Candles and Distances Laboratory at EPFL and Emily Hunt at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, have combined these two approaches for the first time. Using data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission, they mapped nearly 35,000 variable stars inside 1,200 open clusters across the Milky Way. This “bird’s eye view” gives researchers an unprecedented map of how stars live, age, and die as part of their communities.

The findings are published as a Letter to the Editor in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

New patterns in the stellar life cycle

“It is a scientific first in the way that large samples of star clusters and variable stars are analyzed together,” says Anderson. “This creates synergies because the two approaches provide complementary insights.”

The team built their map using the third data release from Gaia, a satellite that precisely measures the positions, brightness, and colors of more than a billion stars. They focused on clusters within 6,500 light-years away to make sure their results were reliable.

The researchers matched Gaia’s catalog of variable stars to the stars in these clusters and checked the ages, distances, and brightness of each one. By tracking where each type of variable star appears in a cluster and how their numbers change with cluster age, the team pieced together new patterns in the stellar life cycle.

The results show that at least one in five stars in these clusters changes brightness over time. Young clusters host the greatest variety of variable stars, while older clusters show more stars with slow, Sun-like cycles. The study also shows that certain types of variable stars serve as markers for a cluster’s age, providing a new tool for measuring how old a group of stars is without having to build complicated models.

“We are made of stardust”

The team made their catalog public, sharing the positions, types, and properties of all 35,000 variable stars in these clusters. The study also offers the cleanest diagram yet showing how different types of variable stars are distributed across the key map astronomers use to track stellar evolution (the Hertzsprung Russell Diagram).

The Gaia mission is now entering its most exciting scientific phase even though the satellite was recently turned off. Over the coming years, Gaia’s vast archive of observations, which cover nearly 2 billion stars, will be processed and analyzed by scientists across Europe.

“Our work is a teaser for what is to come with Gaia [data releases 4 and 5], which will revolutionize the study of stellar populations by their light variations,” says Anderson.

By showing how variable stars can be used as “clocks” and “markers” in stellar evolution, the team has opened up new ways to explore the story of the universe. “We are made of stardust,” says Anderson. “Understanding the lives of stars and the physics that govern stars is crucial to understanding our origins and place in the cosmos.”

 

Other contributors

Heidelberg University

Reference

Richard I. Anderson, Emily L. Hunt. A birds-eye view of stellar evolution through populations of variable stars in Galactic open clusters. Astronomy & Astrophysics 13 August 2025. DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/20255511110.1051/0004-6361/202555111

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns

2025-08-13
Popular generative AI web browser assistants are collecting and sharing sensitive user data, such as medical records and social security numbers, without adequate safeguards, finds a new study led by researchers from UCL and Mediterranea University of ​​Reggio Calabria. The study, which will be presented and published as part of the USENIX Security Symposium, is the first large-scale analysis of generative AI browser assistants and privacy. It uncovered widespread tracking, profiling, and personalisation ...

AI-enhanced infrared thermography for reliable detection of temperature patterns in calves

2025-08-13
Traditional veterinary practices utilize rectal measurements to assess body temperature, but this method is stressful and does not capture continuous changes in body temperature. Fortunately, recent advancements have introduced infrared thermography, which can non-invasively measure body temperatures. However, it is still difficult to continuously monitor temperature changes over time with this method. Moreso, parts of the image data are set manually, which can cause data variations due to setting positions. These drawbacks ...

Now you see me, now you don’t: how subtle ‘sponsored content’ on social media tricks us into viewing ads

2025-08-13
How many ads do you see on social media? It might be more than you realize. Scientists studying how ads work on Instagram-style social media have found that people are not as good at spotting them as they think. If people recognized ads, they usually ignored them - but some, designed to blend in with your friends’ posts, flew under the radar. “We wanted to understand how ads are really experienced in daily scrolling — beyond what people say they notice, to what they actually process,” said Maike Hübner, PhD candidate at the University ...

New method loads mRNA into exosomes in 10 minutes—just mix and go

2025-08-13
Exosomes, naturally derived vesicles responsible for intercellular communication, are emerging as next-generation drug delivery systems capable of transporting therapeutics to specific cells. However, their tightly packed, cholesterol-rich membranes make it extremely difficult to encapsulate large molecules such as mRNA or proteins. Conventional approaches have relied on techniques like electroporation or chemical treatment, which often damage both the drugs and exosomes, reduce delivery efficiency, and require complex purification steps—all of which pose significant barriers to commercialization. A joint research team led by Dr. Hojun Kim at the Center ...

Concerns about sexual function persist well beyond midlife

2025-08-13
CLEVELAND, Ohio (August 13, 2025)—Adults aged 65 years and older are becoming the fastest-growing demographic, yet, the sexual health of older women is often understudied and untreated. A new study demonstrates their rate of sexual problems is similar to that of midlife women, although they are less likely to report distress related to their sexual problems. Results of the study are published online today in Menopause, the journal of The Menopause Society. Although sexual activity declines with age, sexual health remains relevant throughout life ...

Can grapevines help slow the plastic waste problem?

2025-08-13
The need for biodegradable packaging material has never been higher. Currently, most packaging is "single use" and is made with plastic materials, derived from nonrenewable sources like crude oil that take hundreds of years to decompose in the environment. On top of this, only 9% of plastic is recycled. This has resulted in the formation of floating piles of plastic garbage in the ocean, called the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch." But maybe even more concerning is the discovery of micro- and nano-plastics in the environment. Research has found that plastic breaks down into tiny ...

People disregard advice when making tough decisions

2025-08-13
An international study surveying people in a dozen countries found that when it comes to making complex decisions, people all over the world tend to reflect on their own, rather than seek advice. Researchers from the University of Waterloo led the new study that surveyed more than 3,500 people from megacities to small Indigenous communities in the Amazon rainforest to learn how they make decisions. This work is the broadest test of decision-style preferences across cultures to date. The researchers ...

Study reveals how small changes in walking technique may help treat knee osteoarthritis

2025-08-12
Gait analysis and pain measures show that subtly adjusting the angle of the foot during walking may reduce knee pain caused by osteoarthritis. This approach may also slow progression of the condition, an uncurable disease in which the cartilage cushion inside a joint breaks down. Led by a team of researchers at NYU Langone Health, the University of Utah, and Stanford University, a new study explored whether changing the way patients position their feet when walking could lessen extra loading — stress on the joint during motion — and help treat the disease. For ...

Reciprocal links likely between certain groups of gut bacteria and insomnia risk

2025-08-12
There seem to be reciprocal links between certain groups of gut bacteria and the risk of insomnia, suggests a Mendelian randomisation study, published in the open access journal General Psychiatry. Certain types of bacteria seem to boost or lower the risk of the sleep disorder while insomnia itself seems to alter the abundance of certain types of bacteria, the findings indicate. Several studies have explored the effects of the gut microbiome on various sleep characteristics, but it’s not yet clear how different groups ...

Taste and price, not calories, key drivers for online takeaway orders, survey suggests

2025-08-12
Taste and price, rather than calorie content, seem to be the key considerations for those ordering takeaways online, despite calorie labelling legislation designed to help consumers make healthier food choices, suggests an analysis of survey responses, published in the open access journal BMJ Nutrition Prevention & Health. These orders tend to be favoured by younger people and those living with obesity, the responses indicate. And the limited impact of calorie labelling, despite relatively high awareness of the regulations, suggests that additional strategies are needed, say the researchers. Takeaways are ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle

AI web browser assistants raise serious privacy concerns

AI-enhanced infrared thermography for reliable detection of temperature patterns in calves

Now you see me, now you don’t: how subtle ‘sponsored content’ on social media tricks us into viewing ads

New method loads mRNA into exosomes in 10 minutes—just mix and go

Concerns about sexual function persist well beyond midlife

Can grapevines help slow the plastic waste problem?

People disregard advice when making tough decisions

Study reveals how small changes in walking technique may help treat knee osteoarthritis

Reciprocal links likely between certain groups of gut bacteria and insomnia risk

Taste and price, not calories, key drivers for online takeaway orders, survey suggests

Patients still view doctor’s white coat as symbol of professionalism and trust

The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology: Routine AI assistance may lead to loss of skills in health professionals who perform colonoscopies, study suggests

Obese surgical patients’ medication lifeline can reduce risk - study 

How to relieve arthritic knee pain without drugs or surgery

Mental health care needs urgent reform to include lifestyle interventions

Understanding readers’ imaginations could enhance mental health therapies

Musicians do not demonstrate long-believed advantage in processing sound

Potential link between fatigue and breast cancer recurrence

Biophysical Society announces the results of its 2025 elections

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Clinic for Special Children discover ultra rare form of neuroinflammatory disease is much more common in Old Order Amish than general population

We’re in the game: Paul “Bear” Bryant Coach of the Year Award to be featured in EA Sports College Football 26

Black metal could give a heavy boost to solar power generation

We now have the math to describe ‘matrix tides’ and other complex wave patterns seen in Qiantang River

Personalized pricing can backfire on companies, says study

Tiny robots use sound to self-organize into intelligent groups

Laser therapy enhances treatment of fungus resistant to conventional medication

Galactic Rosetta Stone: Study measuring magnetic field near the center of the Milky Way helps to decode the precise astrophysical dynamics at the heart of our galaxy

OU researchers study effects of cannabis on facial wound healing after surgery

New species of ancient whale discovered on Victoria's Surf Coast

[Press-News.org] Gaia’s variable stars: a new map of the stellar life cycle