Chemical traces of 2023 Canadian wildfires detected in Maryland months after smoke subsided
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This May brings a rare celestial treat, two full moons in one month! We’re exploring the science of space and how astronomy connects us through curiosity, discovery, and a shared wonder for what lies beyond.
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 9-May-2026 22:15 ET (10-May-2026 02:15 GMT/UTC)
A new University of Maryland study of campus air samples revealed that chemical compounds from Canada’s historic 2023 fires lingered in the air, forming an ‘atmospheric soup.’
Astronomers combined data from two major gamma-ray observatories with further multi-wavelength information to reveal a “nascent outflow” from the most massive young star cluster in the Milky Way, Westerlund 1.
The observations indicate that charged particles – “cosmic rays” – are accelerated in the vicinity of the star cluster and subsequently transported along the outflow.
The nascent outflow is expected to eventually develop into a channel for the transport of cosmic rays into the Galactic halo – a process widely assumed of great importance for galaxy evolution, but with scarce observational support so far.
Leading X-ray space telescopes XMM-Newton and XRISM have spotted a never-seen-before blast from a supermassive black hole. In a matter of hours, the gravitational monster whipped up powerful winds, flinging material out into space at eye-watering speeds of 60 000 km per second.