Astronomers have uncovered a previously unknown, extreme kind of star factory by taking the temperature of a distant galaxy using the ALMA telescope. The galaxy is glowing intensely in superheated cosmic dust while forming stars 180 times faster than our own Milky Way.
Recent News
Astronomers Share Largest Molecular Survey To-date: GOTHAM Legacy Data Goes Public
Astronomers in the “GBT Observations of TMC-1: Hunting Aromatic Molecules” research survey, known as GOTHAM, have released a spectral line survey with largest amount of telescope time ever conducted, charting more than 100 molecular species only found in deep space.
Astronomers Map Mysterious “Dark” Gas in the Milky Way
An international team of astronomers has created the first-ever large-scale maps of a mysterious form of matter, known as CO-dark molecular gas, in one of our Milky Way Galaxy’s most active star-forming neighborhoods, Cygnus X.
NSF National Radio Astronomy Observatory and Mexican Institutions Sign Historic Agreements to Advance ngVLA Collaboration
The U.S. National Science Foundation National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NSF NRAO), in partnership with several leading Mexican universities and research institutes, has announced a series of landmark agreements and meetings aimed at advancing Mexico’s role in the Next Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) project. This represents a significant step in strengthening international collaboration for one of the world’s most ambitious astronomical observatories.
Over the past months, directors and senior scientists from the Institute of Radio Astronomy and Astrophysics (IRyA), the Institute of Astronomy (IA) at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), the National Institute of Astrophysics, Optics and Electronics (INAOE), the Autonomous University of Chihuahua (UACH), the University of Sonora (UNISON), and the NSF NRAO have met with Mexican and U.S. authorities to chart a course for deepening scientific collaboration on the ngVLA.
Key meetings included a discussion with UNAM’s Rector, Dr. Leonardo Lomelí Vanegas, underscoring UNAM’s commitment to expanding its leadership in radio astronomy, along with strategic engagement with officials from the U.S. Embassy in Mexico, reinforcing cross-border scientific ties. There have also been consultations with the Mexican Secretariat of Science, Humanities, Technology and Innovation (SECIHTI), highlighting governmental support for this binational initiative.
Concurrently, representatives from the participating Mexican institutions convened to formalize the creation of the Consortium of Mexican Universities and Institutions. This consortium, led by the IRyA Director, Dr. Luis A. Zapata, is dedicated to supporting, promoting, and strengthening Mexico’s national participation in the ngVLA project, working in close partnership with the NSF NRAO.
During a binational event hosted at UNAM’s Institute of Astronomy on September 18, 2025, a Letter of Intent was signed by directors and representatives from IRyA, IA-UNAM, INAOE, UACH, UNISON, and the NSF NRAO. The signatories declared their, “interest and commitment to establish a Consortium of Mexican Universities and Institutions. The purpose of this Consortium is to support, promote, and strengthen national participation in the Next Generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) project, in close collaboration with the U.S. National Science Foundation National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NSF NRAO) of the United States of America”.
Tony Beasley, Director of NSF NRAO, stated, “These agreements and the formation of a national consortium mark a new era of partnership between our institutions and communities. The ngVLA will be a transformative instrument for radio astronomy worldwide, and these collaborations will ensure that Mexican scientists, engineers, and students are at the heart of new discoveries for decades to come.”
Luis A. Zapata, Director of the IRyA–UNAM, mentioned, “We have a long tradition of collaboration with our colleagues at the NSF NRAO, and this new initiative will open a new window to further expand our joint efforts in developing state-of-the-art astronomical technology in Mexico.”
The ngVLA will consist of more than 240 antennas across the United States (primarily in the Southwest) and Mexico, delivering unprecedented sensitivity and resolution across the radio spectrum. With its foundation built on partnerships such as this, the project is poised to deliver new insight into the universe, foster training opportunities for the next generation of scientists, and strengthen technological innovation across North America.
About NRAO
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a major facility of the U.S. National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.
This news article was originally published on the NRAO website on November 14, 2025.
Recent News
Astronomers Discover a Superheated Star Factory in the Early Universe
Astronomers have uncovered a previously unknown, extreme kind of star factory by taking the temperature of a distant galaxy using the ALMA telescope. The galaxy is glowing intensely in superheated cosmic dust while forming stars 180 times faster than our own Milky Way.
Astronomers Share Largest Molecular Survey To-date: GOTHAM Legacy Data Goes Public
Astronomers in the “GBT Observations of TMC-1: Hunting Aromatic Molecules” research survey, known as GOTHAM, have released a spectral line survey with largest amount of telescope time ever conducted, charting more than 100 molecular species only found in deep space.
Astronomers Map Mysterious “Dark” Gas in the Milky Way
An international team of astronomers has created the first-ever large-scale maps of a mysterious form of matter, known as CO-dark molecular gas, in one of our Milky Way Galaxy’s most active star-forming neighborhoods, Cygnus X.