
Gaia: science essays
In these short (mostly 2-page, weekly) 'essays', I have picked out some of the scientific highlights of the Gaia mission as they are emerging, or as they caught my attention. They offer a somewhat chronological snapshot of some of the discoveries that Gaia is making across all of astronomy. I've also included some essays on related topics, including the history of astrometry, and some more technical, managerial, or developmental aspects of both the Hipparcos and Gaia missions. In each, I have included a footnote DR1, DR2, EDR3, DR3, etc to indicate which of the (latest) data releases the essay refers to (described in essays #10 and #76), with DR0 signifying technical or historical material not connected with any specific data release. Who are they written for? Anyone who might have a general interest in science and astronomy, including amateur astronomers, young scientists starting out on their careers, mid-career scientists looking in on Gaia for the first time to get a feeling of what is possible, and specialists looking in from different areas of astronomy, or physics more generally. Click on the access PDF icon to access the file. Only a few references are included, and these are 'discreetly' hyperlinked for those who want to read more... where references appear in the form (Einstein 1908) or www.gaia.com, clicking on the text (even though generally not highlighted!) should lead to the relevant online article. Essays 1-236 were published weekly, 237-241 monthly, and 242 onwards every two weeks. In a few cases, I've recorded an interview on the subject (see science interview page).
New: This table page lists all essays, updated to the end of June 2026 (1–235 inclusive), in tabular form. It includes a simple search on the title field.
New: These annual compilations are in both pdf and 'flipbook' form (open in new page; larger files as a download):
pdf:
flipbook:
New: The material in essays 1–239 is broadly included in my review "Space astrometry with Gaia: Advances in understanding our Galaxy" published in Physics Reports, Volume 1150, pp. 1–229 (January 2026): available here
New: This Gaia Science Tree (v4.0, June 2026) presents essays 1–235 (Jan 2021–Jun 2026) as a hyperlinked "mind map"
* all end-nodes are hyperlinked to the given essay number (links are to "legacy" copies at the CERN-Zenodo site)
* catalogue content topics are at top right, background material at bottom left, otherwise moving "outwards" clockwise in the diagram
* I have prepared this as a didactic tool. Please feel free to make use of it as you wish
I have converted Essays 1–130 into audio "discussion-type" podcasts, entirely using generative AI. They are available at my Gaia Essay YouTube channel, and I describe their construction in Essay 227.
Please make use of this subscribe page to receive an email (usually Monday) when each new essay is published
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234. Ultra-faint dwarf galaxies
The oldest and faintest end of the dwarf galaxy spectrum
The class of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies, the first of which were discovered only in 2005, represent the faintest, oldest, most metal-poor, and most dark-matter-dominated end of the dwarf galaxy spectrum. Providing important tests of LambdaCDM cosmology, Gaia is helping to refine their membership, clarify their morphologies (including evidence for tidal disruption), and define their orbits and orbital histories.
23 June 2025

233. Two more exoplanets: Gaia 4b and Gaia 5b
Bringing us up-to-date with Gaia's exoplanet discoveries
Today, NASA's Exoplanet Archive lists almost 6000 confirmed exoplanets. There are only five astrometric discoveries amongst them, with one found from VLT-FORS, and one from radio VLBA. The first Gaia astrometric discovery, HIP 66074, was reported in 2023. Here I describe the two latest discoveries, Gaia 4b and Gaia 5b. And I explain why the numbers discovered with Gaia are still rather small.
16 June 2025

232. Delta Scuti stars
New insights into their complex pulsations
Delta Scuti variables are a common class of pulsating star located at the intersection of the instability strip with the main sequence, showing a rich variety of pulsation behaviour. Gaia-enabled studies are being used to characterise their period-luminosity relation as a function of pulsation mode and metallicity. And a long-standing question being advanced by Gaia is why many of the stars in the Delta Scuti instability strip do not pulsate.
9 June 2025

231. Dwarf spheroidals: an update
More advances in understanding our remote galaxy companions
I describe the latest Gaia-based studies of the classical dwarf spheroidal galaxies of the Local Group. Gaia DR3 is being used to derive improved orbits and orbital histories, and these are shown to link to associated star formation bursts at they approach pericentre. There are new studies of their structure, internal kinematics, and bulk rotation, and of their associated globular cluster systems.
2 June 2025

230. The Oosterhoff dichotomy
Find out how Gaia is advancing this long-standing problem
The Oosterhoff dichotomy is a long-standing problem in the understanding of Galactic globular clusters. It refers to the fact that clusters divide into two distinct groups according to the average period of their RR Lyrae stars pulsating in the fundamental mode. I outline the problem, and show how Gaia is advancing our knowledge, relating it to the ancient merger debris in our Galaxy's halo.
26 May 2025

229. RR Lyrae variables: an update
An update on this important class of variable star
I described Gaia's early contributions to the study of RR Lyrae stars in an earlier essay at the end of 2021. Here I bring the topic up-to-date with the results from DR3. Based on its 270,000 classified objects, applications include further constraints on the period-luminosity relation, various studies of Galactic structure, and improved inputs to stellar evolutionary models.
19 May 2025

228. Cepheid variables: an update
Bringing you up-to-date with Gaia studies of these important variables
I described Gaia's early contributions to the study of Cepheids in an earlier essay at the end of 2021. Here I bring the topic up-to-date with the results from DR3. Based on its 15,000 classified Cepheids, important applications have been improved assignment to their membership of open clusters, updates of the period-luminosity relation, and various studies of Galactic structure.
12 May 2025

227. Essays, podcasts and NotebookLM
Listen to my essays as a discussion-type audio dialogue
I am in the process of converting my written Gaia essays into audio format using the powerful technology of generative AI. I am using Google's NotebookLM to create an audio discussion-type dialogue between two avatars. The results, placed on my YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/@GaiaEssays) are comprehensive, accurate, didactic, and engaging.
5 May 2025

226. Heartbeat stars
An introduction to this curious phenomenon
A remarkable subset of the binary star ellipsoidal variables are the so-called heartbeat stars, named in view the resemblance of their light curves to an electrocardiogram. I outline the discovery journey, the physics underlying the phenomenon, and the role that Gaia can play in their understanding.
28 April 2025

225. Rotational parallaxes
A method to determine distances to Local Group galaxies
Distances can be determined to Local Group disk galaxies using the `rotational parallax'. For a system in uniform bulk rotation, equating the rotation amplitude from proper motions to that from radial velocities fixes the distance. I describe the cosmological relevance, and the current status for M31 and M33.
21 April 2025

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