
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Astronomers have discovered dozens of faint ribbons of stars in the outskirts of the Milky Way using data from the European Space Agency's Gaia mission.
The findings were made using a new algorithm that more than quadruples the number of known candidates of these so-called "stellar streams." This discovery could offer fresh clues about how our galaxy evolved and how its dark matter is distributed, the study's researchers say.
Stellar streams are arcing threads of stars that form when compact star clusters travel through the Milky Way's gravitational field, shedding stars that are stretched out into long, trailing ribbons.
"It's like riding a bike with a bag of sand, only the bag has a hole in it," study co-author Oleg Gnedin, a theoretical astrophysicist at the University of Michigan, said in a statement. "Those grains of sand are like the stars left behind along their trajectory."
Finding stellar streams is valuable because the shapes and motions of these phenomena preserve a record of what gravitational forces have acted on them over time. That makes them powerful tools for mapping the Milky Way's mass, and that mass measurement would include its elusive dark matter halo — dark matter being the invisible "glue" thought to hold galaxies together, but has yet to be observed directly despite decades of effort.
The new study, led by Yingtian "Bill" Chen of the University of Michigan, identifies 87 stellar stream candidates associated with globular clusters, which are dense, ancient groupings of stars that orbit the Milky Way. Previously, fewer than 20 stellar streams had been identified, often only serendipitously in Gaia data, leaving astronomers with too small a sample size to draw broad conclusions.
Most known stellar streams come from dwarf galaxies or clusters that have already been largely torn apart. Streams from still-surviving globular clusters, like those identified in the new study, are much rarer and especially useful because astronomers can compare the stream directly with its parent cluster.
To find them, Chen developed a computer algorithm called StarStream, which searches for streams using a physics-based model rather than relying on visual patterns alone, according to the study. The team then applied the method to Gaia data, which from 2014 to 2025 mapped the positions and motions of billions of stars in the Milky Way.
"It turns out that it's a lot easier to find things when you have a theoretical expectation of what you're looking for when you have a simple phenomenological picture," Gnedin said in the statement.
The results also revealed that many streams do not match the classic expectation of thin, well-aligned trails. Instead, the study reports that some of the newfound streams are shorter, wider or even misaligned with their parent clusters' orbits — suggesting earlier searches may have missed them by focusing only on the most obvious structures.
The expanded sample also provides evidence that some diffuse globular clusters are shedding stars at unusually high rates, a sign they may be nearing complete tidal disruption, the study reports.
Not all 87 candidates are expected to be confirmed, however, as some detections have lower confidence due to background contamination from unrelated stars, the researchers say.
The study's results, along with the algorithm applied to them, can be tested with upcoming observations from next-generation facilities — including the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope and the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument — to help verify which streams are real, Chen said in the statement.
"It'll be very easy to adjust the algorithm to future missions," he said. "Once we have the data, it will be very straightforward to apply it."
This research is described in a paper published March 23 in The Astrophysical Journal.
latest_posts
- 1
Figure out How to Streamline Eco-friendliness in Your Volvo XC40 - 2
Ministry: New German petrol price regulation takes effect on April 1 - 3
Figure out How to Get a good deal on Your Rooftop Substitution Venture - 4
Aid sent by ambulance to Ukraine front line - 5
Transcript: NASA's Jared Isaacman on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," April 5, 2026
'People We Meet on Vacation' is the 1st of many Emily Henry adaptations: What other books turned movies to look forward to
The Ursid meteor shower will be the last of the year, peaking just before Christmas: What to know and how to watch
The 10 Most Compelling Forerunners in Innovation
'The Real Housewives of Rhode Island' 1st teaser trailer unveiled: Which Bachelor Nation star is part of the cast? And when does it premiere?
Cyber Monday 2025: Save over 70% on HBO Max with this Prime Video streaming deal
Remain Fit: Powerful Wellness and Work-out Schedules for a Better You
What are the health benefits of whole milk for kids?
Tech Devices 2023: The Most blazing Arrivals of the Year
Bring tissues and skip the mascara: The movie that's making theater-goers sob uncontrollaby











