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Journals
Highlights from AAS Nova: 8–21 February 2026
23 Feb 2026
New from AAS Nova: a dwarf galaxy with too many satellites, a molecular map of a pre-stellar core, a triple black hole drama, and more.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 25 January – 7 February 2026
9 Feb 2026
New from AAS Nova: recent results regarding 3I/ATLAS, a dark matter origin for little red dots, and Hubble's observations of the largest known protoplanetary disk.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 11–24 January 2026
26 Jan 2026
New from AAS Nova: a potential origin story for ultra-long-period pulsars, a rare gamma-ray burst, and a visit to Kitt Peak National Observatory.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 14 December 2025 – 10 January 2026
12 Jan 2026
New from AAS Nova: highlights from the 247th meeting of the AAS and a look back at some of the top articles of 2025.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 30 November – 13 December 2025
16 Dec 2025
New from AAS Nova: why quasars make bad neighbors, the most luminous fast blue optical transient, signs of solar flares, and more.
Brian Jackson Selected as Editor for the Planetary Science Journal
3 Dec 2025
Brian Jackson, Professor of Physics at Boise State University and Director of the Central Idaho Dark Sky Reserve STEM Network, will serve as the next Editor of the Planetary Science Journal.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 9–29 November 2025
1 Dec 2025
New from AAS Nova: the shared origins of stellar-mass black hole systems, evidence for the universe's first stars, and more info on Betelgeuse's stellar companion.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 26 October – 8 November 2025
10 Nov 2025
New from AAS Nova: tangled black hole family trees, expanding supernova remnants, and an exploration of magma oceans on exoplanets.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 12–25 October 2025
27 Oct 2025
New from AAS Nova: planets that "ring" like bells, an investigation of the first radio-bright off-nuclear tidal disruption event, and one intriguing brown dwarf that's actually two.
Highlights from AAS Nova: 28 September – 11 October 2025
13 Oct 2025
New from AAS Nova: a growing planet, a rare recurrent nova system, and a study of extragalactic supernova remnants.