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  • As part of the dark matter Insight, Joshua Frieman, co-founder and director of the Dark Energy Survey collaboration, tells us about the ambitious project aiming to probe the origin of cosmic acceleration.

    • Iulia Georgescu
    Q&A
  • The destruction of stars by supermassive black holes appears to be rarer than predicted. A candidate stellar disruption in a kind of galaxy that is usually obscured may explain why.

    • James Guillochon
    News & Views
  • We think dark matter exists because measurements of ‘normal’ matter would not otherwise make sense. In this Insight on dark matter — offered jointly by Nature Astronomy and Nature Physics — we showcase the various techniques trying to make sense of it.

    Editorial
  • A phenomenon recently studied in theoretical physics may hold considerable interest for astronomers: the explosive decay of primordial black holes through quantum tunnelling. Their detection would be of major theoretical importance.

    • Carlo Rovelli
    Comment
  • Black holes present a profound challenge to our current foundations of physics, and an exciting era of astronomy is just opening in which gravitational-wave observation and very-long-baseline interferometry may provide important hints about the new principles of physics needed.

    • Steven B. Giddings
    Comment
  • From near-Earth asteroids to superluminous supernovae and gravitational wave counterparts, the Zwicky Transient Facility will soon scan for transient phenomena, explain Eric Bellm and Shrinivas Kulkarni.

    • Eric Bellm
    • Shrinivas Kulkarni
    Mission Control
  • Millimetre-wavelength interferometry and gravitational-wave detectors currently provide the most stringent tests for the existence of cosmic black holes. Complementary measurements of magnetic fields near their event horizon would be decisive.

    • Andrei Lobanov
    Comment
  • Spectroscopic and imaging data for low metallicity galaxies observed during the peak epoch of star formation offer detailed insights into the most distant galaxies discovered to date.

    • Alice Shapley
    News & Views
  • From the first hints of unseen matter in the Universe to the present body of evidence for dark matter, James Peebles outlines the significant developments in observation and theory in the 1970s in this Insight Perspective.

    • P. J. E. Peebles
    Perspective
  • The authors find that a nearby planetary system has two terrestrial planets that transit in front of their star (from our perspective). Transiting terrestrial planets are sought after, as they can be characterized in detail, including their atmospheres. Having two in the same system is very rare.

    • Michaël Gillon
    • Brice-Olivier Demory
    • Alessandro Sozzetti
    Letter
  • The acceptance of dark matter came slowly despite its abundance. Jaco de Swart and colleagues reconstruct the history of how dark matter brought astronomers to cosmology in their Review Article, which is part of the Insight on dark matter.

    • J. G. de Swart
    • G. Bertone
    • J. van Dongen
    Review Article
  • A selected group of intermediate-redshift galaxies appear similar to primeval galaxies. Analysing spectra of these nearer analogues for chemical abundances and ionization levels gives an improved understanding of galaxies that are too faint to study well.

    • Ricardo Amorín
    • Adriano Fontana
    • Emiliano Merlin
    Letter
  • A binary system containing a ‘polluted’ white dwarf must host a stable, rocky, circumbinary debris disk, argue Farihi and colleagues. Therefore large planetesimal formation, and potentially terrestrial planet formation, must be robust and common in such systems.

    • J. Farihi
    • S. G. Parsons
    • B. T. Gänsicke
    Letter
  • An uncharacteristically long stellar disruption from a supermassive black hole has been unravelling over the last decade. Spectral information implies very efficient accretion but recent observations hint at a transition to a less extreme accretion mode.

    • Dacheng Lin
    • James Guillochon
    • Stephen D. J. Gwyn
    Letter