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  • Solar wind observations from the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission reveal bursty, turbulent properties within a reconnection diffusion region, in contrast with the usual quasi-steady state of solar wind reconnection. Between October 2017 and May 2019 75 other similar events were identified, indicating the relevance of turbulent reconnection in the solar wind.

    • Rongsheng Wang
    • Shimou Wang
    • Walter Gonzalez
    Article
  • The 2019 carbon footprint of the W. M. Keck Observatory is estimated at 3.0 tonnes of CO2 equivalent per science night and that figure will move towards net zero over the next decade or so by decarbonizing the Observatory’s vehicle fleet, aviation footprint reductions and other measures.

    • Kevin L. McCann
    • Craig Nance
    • Josh Walawender
    Comment
  • The development and use of research infrastructures accounts for more than 70% of the carbon footprint of the Institute for Research in Astrophysics and Planetology. Our community needs to rethink this crucial facet of astronomical research to engage in effective and perennial reduction strategies.

    • Pierrick Martin
    • Sylvie Brau-Nogué
    • Luigi Tibaldo
    Comment
  • A deep learning method accurately measures galaxy cluster mass with the aid of real galaxy clusters detected by the Planck satellite.

    • Ziang Yan
    News & Views
  • The coda correlation wavefield technique provides a powerful tool for surveying planetary interiors using only data from a single station. Its application to the SEIS seismometer on the InSight lander, which has been providing unique data on the interior of Mars since 2018, is a promising example of what it can bring to planetary seismology studies.

    • Steven J. Gibbons
    News & Views
  • A method that uses intersource correlograms measured by a single-station seismograph to constrain planetary interiors is presented. Applied to Mars, it measures a core radius of 1,812 ± 20 km, consistent with InSight direct-seismic-wave measurements. Such a method is useful in planetary exploration where the deployment of a full network of seismographs is unlikely.

    • Sheng Wang
    • Hrvoje Tkalčić
    Article
  • The marsquakes dataset acquired by InSight shows that the Cerberus Fossae graben system is still actively opening, accounting for almost half of Mars’s seismic moment detected so far. This activity indicates the presence of a warm source located at 40 km depth, possibly due to local magmatic processes.

    • Simon C. Stähler
    • Anna Mittelholz
    • W. Bruce Banerdt
    Article
  • A simultaneous reconstruction of three functions describing the expansion of the Universe and gravitational effects on light and matter shows the extent to which modified gravity can address tensions between the standard cosmological model and a large body of observations.

    • Levon Pogosian
    • Marco Raveri
    • Alex Zucca
    Article
  • Preliminary observations from the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer of a well-studied X-ray pulsar are discordant with theoretical expectations, prompting a reassessment of our understanding of the accretion process.

    • Hua Feng
    News & Views
  • X-ray polarimetry observations with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer constrain the accretion geometry in an X-ray pulsar and provide evidence for a misalignment of the spin, magnetic and orbital axes in Her X-1.

    • Victor Doroshenko
    • Juri Poutanen
    • Fei Xie
    Article
  • Using Gaia and XMM-Newton to constrain the distance to and properties of the central compact object of a supernova remnant, an extremely light (\(0.7{7}_{-0.17}^{+0.20}\) solar masses) neutron star has been found. This mass is twice as light as normally found for these kinds of object, and places limits on the allowed equations of state of neutron star matter.

    • Victor Doroshenko
    • Valery Suleimanov
    • Andrea Santangelo
    Article
  • How does one maintain a personal professional identity while part of a large collaboration in which everything is a team effort? Tensions will undoubtedly arise, but among the Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration, at least, they are resolved as one would handle family dynamics.

    • Gina Maffey
    Feature
  • Although space debris has been a problem for decades, recent investment in active debris clearing shows a wider commitment to sustainable space development.

    Editorial