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Wenbin Lu Named 2026 Sloan Fellow
Congratulations to Professor Wenbin Lu on being awarded the 2026 Sloan Research Fellowship, a prestigious award which honors exceptional scholars that stand out as early-career researchers.
Read full article here:...Read more about Wenbin Lu Named 2026 Sloan Fellow
NASA Webb Finds Early-Universe Analog’s Unexpected Talent for Making Dust
A team featuring our own Professor Dan Weisz was featured recently in an article from NASA highlighting how they used observations from The James Webb Space Telescope of a nearby galaxy to study interstellar dust that is thought to be similar to what was presented in the early...Read more about NASA Webb Finds Early-Universe Analog’s Unexpected Talent for Making Dust
Professor Dan Weisz Awarded a Miller Professorship for 2026-2027
Congratulations to Professor Dan Weisz for being awarded a Miller Professorship for 2026-2027.
A Miller Professorship is a prestigious research appointment offered by the Miller Institute to individuals who have shown outstanding performance in research and teaching within their
...Read more about Professor Dan Weisz Awarded a Miller Professorship for 2026-2027Why are Tatooine planets rare? Blame general relativity.
Astronomers have found thousands of exoplanets around single stars, but few around binary stars — even though both types of stars are equally common. Physicists can now explain the dearth.
Of the more than 4,500 stars known to have planets, one puzzling statistic stands out. Even...Read more about Why are Tatooine planets rare? Blame general relativity.
Professor Martin White Named American Astronomical Society (AAS) Fellow
We are proud to announce that Professor Martin White was honored by the American Astronomical Society (AAS) as a new Fellow for pioneering contributions to our understanding of current cosmology, the cosmic microwave background and baryon acoustic oscillations, clustering...Read more about Professor Martin White Named American Astronomical Society (AAS) Fellow
Astronomers see fireworks from violent collisions around nearby star
While searching for exoplanets, scientists captured the first direct images of colliding objects in a neighboring star system. “We just witnessed the collision of two planetesimals and the dust cloud that gets spewed out of that violent event, which begins reflecting...Read more about Astronomers see fireworks from violent collisions around nearby star
What’s powering these mysterious, bright blue cosmic flashes? Astronomers find a clue.
Celebrating Black Hole Friday with Chung-Pei Ma
Astronomy faculty Chung-Pei Ma was featured in an article by the National Academy of Sciences celebrating black holes and Professor Ma’s contributions to the field, including highlighting a paper published earlier this year about a supermassive Black Hole 20 billion times the mass of the Sun!...Read more about Celebrating Black Hole Friday with Chung-Pei Ma
UC Berkeley Astrophysicist Kareem El-Badry Named 2025 MacArthur ‘Genius’ Fellow
Kareem El-Badry, a former UC Berkeley graduate student and now an assistant professor of astronomy at Caltech, has been awarded a prestigious 2025 MacArthur Fellowship for his groundbreaking work in astrophysics. El-Badry's research focuses on the formation, evolution, and...Read more about UC Berkeley Astrophysicist Kareem El-Badry Named 2025 MacArthur ‘Genius’ Fellow
Not one, but two massive black holes are eating away at this galaxy
University of California, Berkeley, astronomers have now discovered the first instance of a massive black hole tearing apart a star thousands of light years from the galaxy’s core, which itself contains a massive black hole.
“The classic location where you expect...Read more about Not one, but two massive black holes are eating away at this galaxy
On Jupiter, it’s mushballs all the way down
Imagine a SlusheeTM composed of ammonia and water encased in a hard shell of water ice. Now picture these ice-encrusted slushballs, dubbed “mushballs,” raining down like hailstones during a thunderstorm, illuminated by intense flashes of lightning.
Planetary scientists at the...Read more about On Jupiter, it’s mushballs all the way down
UC Berkeley Astrophysics Scholars Awarded NASA Postdoctoral Fellowships for 2025
The NHFP enables outstanding postdoctoral scientists to pursue independent research in any area of NASA Astrophysics, using theory, observations, simulations, experimentation, or instrument development.
The highly competitive NASA Hubble Fellowship Program (NHFP)
...Read more about UC Berkeley Astrophysics Scholars Awarded NASA Postdoctoral Fellowships for 2025Nick Choksi has been awarded one of the 2025 51 Pegasi b Fellowships
The Heising-Simons Foundation’s Science program announced a new class of 51 Pegasi b Fellows, comprised of eight outstanding early career scientists focused on...Read more about Nick Choksi has been awarded one of the 2025 51 Pegasi b Fellowships
Prof. Alex Filippenko was interviewed by Dr. Brian Greene for the World Science Festival
In Dec. 2024, Prof. Alex Filippenko was interviewed by Dr. Brian Greene for the World Science Festival. They discussed the accelerating expansion of the Universe, dark energy, and especially the current "Hubble tension" -- the discrepancy...Read more about Prof. Alex Filippenko was interviewed by Dr. Brian Greene for the World Science Festival
Wenbin Lu will receive awards from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement in the first year of Scialog: Early Science with the LSST
Research Corporation for Science Advancement will make 21 separate awards of $60,000 in direct costs each to support the research of 20 scientists from colleges, universities, and research institutions in the United States...Read more about Wenbin Lu will receive awards from the Research Corporation for Science Advancement in the first year of Scialog: Early Science with the LSST
Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.
A third outrigger radio array will go online this week at Hat Creek Observatory, a facility in Northern California formerly owned and operated by UC Berkeley and now managed by the SETI Institute in Mountain View. Together, the four arrays will immensely improve CHIME’s ability to precisely...Read more about Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.
The Hubble Space Telescope completes a high-resolution portrait of our galaxy’s gorgeous neighbor
It may be a “train wreck,” in the words of UC Berkeley astronomer Dan Weisz, but it’s a beautiful train wreck.
A mosaic image of the entire Andromeda galaxy (Messier 31, or M31), 2.5 million light years away but six times larger...Read more about The Hubble Space Telescope completes a high-resolution portrait of our galaxy’s gorgeous neighbor
Raffaella Margutti Awarded the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers
2024 TOP AWARD WINNER - Sanjana Curtis
Sanjana Curtis is an NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow at UC Berkeley. Her research focuses on some of the most extreme phenomena in the universe, such as the explosive deaths of stars and mergers involving neutron stars and black holes. Many of the elements that make up...Read more about 2024 TOP AWARD WINNER - Sanjana Curtis
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