#DiamondOpenAccess

2026-02-07

Weekly Update from the Open Journal of Astrophysics – 07/02/2026

It’s Saturday once more so time for another update of activity at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Since the last update we have published a further six papers, bringing the number in Volume 9 (2026) to 24 and the total so far published by OJAp up to 472.

I will continue to include the posts made on our Mastodon account (on Fediscience) to encourage you to visit it. Mastodon is a really excellent service, and a more than adequate replacement for X/Twitter which nobody should be using; these announcement also show the DOI for each paper.

The first paper to report this week is “The Impact of Star Formation and Feedback Recipes on the Stellar Mass and Interstellar Medium of High-Redshift Galaxies” by Harley Katz (U. Chicago, USA), Martin P. Rey (U. Oxford, UK), Corentin Cadiou (Lund U., Sweden) Taysun Kimm (Yonsei U., Korea) and Oscar Agertz (Lund). This paper was published on Monday 2nd February 2026 in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies. It introduces MEGATRON, a new model for galaxy formation simulations, highlighting that feedback energy controls star formation at high redshift and highlighting the importance of the interstellar medium.

The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the announcement on Fediverse here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116000695648050758

The second paper is “Photometric Redshifts in JWST Deep Fields: A Pixel-Based Alternative with DeepDISC” by Grant Merz (U. Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) and 6 others, all based in the USA. This paper was published on Monday February 2nd 2026 in the folder Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics. This paper explores the effectiveness of the DeepDISC machine learning algorithm in estimating photometric redshifts from near-infrared data, demonstrating its potential for larger image volumes and spectroscopic samples

The overlay for this one is here:

The official version of the paper can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116000777572439111

Next, published on Wednesday 4th February in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies, is “Inferring Interstellar Medium Density, Temperature, and Metallicity from Turbulent H II Regions” by Larrance Xing (U. Chicago, USA), Nicholas Choustikov (U. Oxford, UK), Harley Katz (U. Chicago) and Alex J. Cameron (DAWN, Denmark). This paper argues that supersonic turbulenc affects the interpretation of H II region properties, potentially impacting inferred metallicity, ionization, and excitation from in nebular emission lines, motivating more extensive modelling.

The overlay is here:

The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116011384659092223

The fourth paper this week, also published on Wednesday 4th February, but in the folder Solar and Stellar Astrophysics, is “A Systematic Search for Big Dippers in ASAS-SN” by B. JoHantgen, D. M. Rowan, R. Forés-Toribio, C. S. Kochanek, & K. Z. Stanek (Ohio State University, USA), B. J. Shappee (U. Hawaii, USA), Subo Dong (Peking University), J. L. Prieto Universidad Diego Portales, Chile) and Todd A. Thompson (Ohio State). This study identifies 4 new dipper stars and 15 long-period eclipsing binary candidates using ASAS-SN light curves and multi-wavelength data, categorizing them based on their characteristics.

Here is the overlay:

The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116011460612040834

Fifth, and next to last this week we have “Unveiling the drivers of the Baryon Cycles with Interpretable Multi-step Machine Learning and Simulations” by Mst Shamima Khanom, Benjamin W. Keller and Javier Ignacio Saavedra Moreno (U. Memphis, USA). This paper was published on Thursday 5th February 2026 in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies. This study uses machine learning methods to understand how galaxies lose or retain baryons, highlighting the relationship between baryon fraction and various galactic measurements.

The overlay is here:

The accepted version can be found on arXiv here, and the fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116016883984380622

Finally for this week we have “The Bispectrum of Intrinsic Alignments: II. Precision Comparison Against Dark Matter Simulations” by Thomas Bakx (Utrecht U., Netherlands), Toshiki Kurita (MPA Garching, Germany), Alexander Eggemeier (U. Bonn, Germany), Nora Elisa Chisari (Utrecht) and Zvonimir Vlah (Ruđer Bošković Institute, Croatia). This paper was accepted in December, but publication got delayed by the Christmas effect so was published on February 6th 2026, in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics. This study uses N-body simulations to accurately measure three-dimensional bispectra of halo intrinsic alignments and dark matter overdensities, providing a method to determine higher order shape bias parameters.

The overlay is here:

You can find the published version of the article here, and the Mastodon announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/116022562915557971

And that concludes this week’s update. I will do another next Saturday.

#arXiv241107282v2 #arXiv250409744v3 #arXiv250706818v3 #arXiv250719594v2 #arXiv251027032v2 #arXiv260202949v1 #ASASSN #AstridSimulations #AstrophysicsOfGalaxies #bispectrum #CosmologyAndNonGalacticAstrophysics #DEEPDisc #DiamondOpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccessPublishing #dipperStars #galaxyClusters #galaxyFormation #galaxyHaloes #HighEnergyAstrophysicalPhenomena #HIIRegions #InstrumentationAndMethodsForAstrophysics #InterstellarMedium #intrinsicAlignments #JWST #largeScaleStructureOfTheUniverse #MachineLearning #MEGATRON #NebularEmission #OpenAccess #OpenAccessPublishing #OpenJournalOfAstrophysics #PhotometricRedshifts #SolarAndStellarAstrophysics #starFormation #TheOpenJournalOfAstrophysics #Turbulence
2026-02-06

Receive the Centre Mersenne newsletter!
Keep up to date with the latest news, developments, ongoing projects, upcoming conferences, and more.
View the latest newsletter and subscribe: centre-mersenne.org/newsletter

#openaccess #diamondopenaccess #scientificpublishing

2026-02-06

Save the Date: Am 29. bis 30. April findet unser Open Access Barcamp 2026 statt. Dieses Mal in Kooperation mit dem Bibliotheks- und Informationssystem (BIS) der @UniOldenburg.

Von OA-Professionals bis Neulinge sind alle willkommen, die sich für Open Access interessieren.
Wir freuen uns auf einen offenen und spannenden Austausch mit euch in #Oldenburg!

In Kürze erfahrt ihr hier mehr: open-access.network/vernetzen/

#OpenScience #OAbarcamp #OpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccess #OA #Bibliothek #WissKomm

Save the Date | Oldenburg | Open Access Barcamp | 29.-30.04.2026 | oa.barcamp
Foto des BIS Oldenburg//Universität Oldenburg
Programming Historianproghist@hcommons.social
2026-02-04

Grateful thanks to @ugent, who have again renewed their membership to our Institutional Partnership Programme 💫

As a #DiamondOpenAccess publisher, we rely on community investment to maintain and develop our multilingual portfolio of journals.

🔗 tinyurl.com/support-PH

2026-01-31

Weekly Update from the Open Journal of Astrophysics – 31/01/2026

It’s Saturday once more so time for another update of activity at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Since the last update we have published a further three papers, bringing the number in Volume 9 (2026) to 18 and the total so far published by OJAp up to 466.

I will continue to include the posts made on our Mastodon account (on Fediscience) to encourage you to visit it. Mastodon is a really excellent service, and a more than adequate replacement for X/Twitter which nobody should be using; these announcement also show the DOI for each paper.

The first paper to report this week is “Probing Stellar Kinematics with the Time-Asymmetric Hanbury Brown and Twiss Effect” by Lucijana Stanic (University of Zurich, Switzerland) and 13 others based in Zurich, Lausanne and Geneva (all in Switzerland). This was published on Monday 26th January 2026 in the folder Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics. This research demonstrates that intensity interferometry can reveal internal stellar kinematics, providing a new way to observe stellar dynamics with high time resolution.

The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the announcement on Fediverse here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115961234375736584

The second paper is “DIPLODOCUS I: Framework for the evaluation of relativistic transport equations with continuous forcing and discrete particle interactions” by Christopher N Everett & Garret Cotter (University of Oxford, UK). This was published on Tuesday January 27th 2026 in the folder High-Energy Astrophysical Phenomena. DIPLODOCUS is a new framework for mesoscopic modelling of astrophysical systems, using an integral formulation of relativistic transport equations and a discretisation procedure for particle distributions.

The overlay for this one is here:

The official version of the paper can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115966199181415094

Next, also published on Tuesday January 27th but in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics we have “The Atacama Cosmology Telescope: DR6 Sunyaev-Zel’dovich Selected Galaxy Clusters Catalog” by M. Aguena et al. (101 authors altogether), on behalf of the ACT-DES-HSC Collaboration. This article reports on the discovery of 10,040 galaxy clusters in the Atacama Cosmology Telescope data, including 1,180 clusters at high redshifts, using the Sunyaev-Zel’dovich effect.

The overlay is here:

The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115966458299870033

And finally for this week we have a paper published yesterday, Friday 30th January 2026, in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies. This is the paper I blogged about yesterday: “A Cosmic Miracle: A Remarkably Luminous Galaxy at zspec = 14.44 Confirmed with JWST” by Rohan Naidu (MIT Kavli Institute) and an international cast of 45 others. This article reports on the discovery by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) of a bright galaxy, MoM-z14, located 280 million years post-Big Bang, that challenges models of galaxy formation and the star-formation history of early galaxies.

The overlay is here:

The accepted version can be found on arXiv here, and the fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115982837486159819

And that concludes the update for this week. I will do another next Saturday.

#ACTDESHSCCollaboration #arXiv250511263v2 #arXiv250721459v3 #arXiv250813296v4 #arXiv250913152v2 #AstridSimulations #AstrophysicsOfGalaxies #CosmologyAndNonGalacticAstrophysics #DiamondOpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccessPublishing #DIPLODOCUS #galaxyClusters #galaxyFormation #HanburyBrownAndTwiss #HighEnergyAstrophysicalPhenomena #InstrumentationAndMethodsForAstrophysics #JWST #largeScaleStructureOfTheUniverse #MoMZ14 #OpenAccess #OpenAccessPublishing #OpenJournalOfAstrophysics #PlasmaPhysics #relativisticTransportEquations #starFormation #StellarKinematics #SunyaevZeDovichEffect #TheOpenJournalOfAstrophysics

Milano University Pressmilanoup@mastodon.uno
2026-01-30

#CFP 📣

La rivista artistico-scientifica #MUSE ha aperto la #Callforpapers per il secondo numero, rivolta a studiosi nei settori della #musica, delle #artivisive, della #drammaturgia, della #danza e del #design.

📅 Entro il 15 maggio 2026
🌍 Contributi in italiano e inglese
👀 Peer review in modalità double-blind
💎 #DiamondOpenAccess - nessun costo per pubblicare

Tutti i dettagli alla pagina riviste.unimi.it/index.php/mus

@cultura

Logo rivista unimi MUSE
Christof Schöchchristof@fedihum.org
2026-01-26

@stephenturner.us
@petersuber

Mostly solid piece, but it once more conflates open access with "author pays" / APCs!

Readers are misled to place the blame on open access for the "perverse incentive", but this concerns Gold OA model only!

Ca. 70% of journals in DOAJ are Diamond OA, without any author fees, not subject to this incentive structure. To be fair, they also rarely have the capacity to handle large volumes of special issues.

#DiamondOpenAccess #OpenAccess

Milano University Pressmilanoup@mastodon.uno
2026-01-26

#CallForPapers 📣

The Board of the #ItalianReviewOfLegalHistory invites all scholars to contribute to the 2026 issue with papers on legal and legal-historical subjects.

💎 #DiamondOpenAccess — no fees for authors!
📆 Deadline: 31st March for abstracts, 30th June for papers
🌍 Open to contributions in Italian, English, French, German, Spanish or Portuguese

More information here: riviste.unimi.it/index.php/irl

@cultura

Italian Review of Legal History logo
2026-01-24

Weekly Update from the Open Journal of Astrophysics – 24/01/2026

It’s Saturday once more so time for another update of activity at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Since the last update we have published a further three papers, bringing the number in Volume 9 (2026) to 14 and the total so far published by OJAp up to 462. This week was slightly affected by a Federal holiday in the USA on January 19th; there were no arXiv announcements the following day.

I will continue to include the posts made on our Mastodon account (on Fediscience) to encourage you to visit it. Mastodon is a really excellent service, and a more than adequate replacement for X/Twitter which nobody should be using.

The first paper to report this week is “The Properties of Little Red Dot Galaxies in the ASTRID Simulation” by Patrick LaChance, Rupert A. C. Croft, Tiziana Di Matteo & Yihao Zhou (Carnegie Mellon U.), Fabio Pacucci (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA), Yueying Ni (U. Michigan Ann Arbor), Nianyi Chen (Princeton U.) and Simeon Bird (UC Riverside), all based in the USA. This paper was published on Monday 19th January 2026 in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics; the study analyses mock observations of “Little Red Dot” galaxies created from the ASTRID simulation, having high stellar masses and containing massive black holes; not all features match real observations.

The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the announcement on Fediverse here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115921308789068125

The second paper is “Angular bispectrum of matter number counts in cosmic structures” by Thomas Montandon (U. Montpellier, France), Enea Di Dio (U. Genève, Switzerland), Cornelius Rampf (Ruđer Bošković Institute, Croatia) and Julian Adamek (U. Zürich, Switzerland). This was published on Wednesday January 21st, also in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics. This paper presents thee first full-sky computation of the angular bispectrum in second-order perturbation theory, offering insights into the Universe’s initial conditions, gravity, and cosmological parameters. The results align well with simulations.

The overlay for this one is here:

The official version of the paper can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115932387870297108

Next, and last for this week, we have “The Kinematic Properties of TŻO Candidate HV 11417 with Gaia DR3” by Anna J. G. O’Grady (Carnegie Mellon University, USA). This was published on Wednesday 21st January 2026 in the folder Solar and Stellar Astrophysics. This work uses updated data to confirm that HV 11417, a potential Thorne-Żytkow Object, is probably part of the Small Magellanic Cloud and qualifies as a runaway star.

The overlay is here:

The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115932444483985982

That concludes the update for this week. I will do another next Saturday.

#angularBispectrum #arXiv250105422v3 #arXiv251123368v2 #AstridSimulations #AstrophysicsOfGalaxies #bispectrum #CosmologyAndNonGalacticAstrophysics #DiamondOpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccessPublishing #GaiaDR3 #largeScaleStructureOfTheUniverse #LittleRedDots #OpenAccess #OpenAccessPublishing #OpenJournalOfAstrophysics #SolarAndStellarAstrophysics #TheOpenJournalOfAstrophysics #ThorneŻytkowObjects

2026-01-23

Gemeinsam Open-Access-Infrastruktur stärken: Konsortium „PKP Open Journal Systems Deutschland 2026–2028“ mit 14 deutschen Einrichtungen gestartet

read this article in English

Im Januar 2026 startet das neue Konsortium „PKP Open Journal Systems Deutschland 2026–2028“. 14 Einrichtungen aus Deutschland haben gemeinsam ihre Unterstützung für das Public Knowledge Project (PKP) erklärt und sich für die nächsten drei Jahre zu Mitgliedsbeiträgen verpflichtet. Auf diese Weise tragen sie zur nachhaltigen und gemeinsamen Finanzierung relevanter Open-Access-Infrastruktur bei.

Im Herbst 2025 haben PKP und TIB wissenschaftliche Einrichtungen in Deutschland aufgerufen, diesem Konsortium beizutreten. Open Journal Systems (OJS) ist die weltweit am weitesten verbreitete offene Software für wissenschaftliches Publizieren. Sie ist eine wesentliche Voraussetzung für zahlreiche wissenschaftsgetragene Publikationsangebote in Deutschland und ermöglicht auf diese Weise eine sehr große Anzahl an Diamond-Open-Access-Publikationen. Ziel des Konsortiums ist es, die Entwicklung dieser Software sowie weitere relevante Aktivitäten von PKP abzusichern.

Zum Start haben diese Einrichtungen ihren Beitritt erklärt:

  • BIS – Bibliotheks- und Informationssystem der Universität Oldenburg
  • Hochschulbibliothekszentrum des Landes NRW
  • Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin – Universitätsbibliothek
  • Technische Informationsbibliothek (TIB). Leibniz-Informationszentrum Technik und Naturwissenschaften und Universitätsbibliothek
  • Universität Heidelberg – Universitätsbibliothek
  • Universität Konstanz, Kommunikations-, Informations-, Medienzentrum (KIM) IT- und Bibliotheksdienste
  • Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek Köln
  • Universitätsbibliothek Braunschweig
  • Universitätsbibliothek Clausthal
  • Universitätsbibliothek der Technischen Universität Berlin
  • Universitätsbibliothek Koblenz
  • Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig
  • Universitätsbibliothek Mannheim
  • Universitätsbibliothek Potsdam

Alle teilnehmenden Einrichtungen werden eigenständige PKP-Mitglieder und können sich in die PKP-Community und -Diskussionen einbringen. Die TIB hat die Vereinbarung organisiert, kümmert sich um die regelmäßige Informationsversorgung der Konsorten und ermöglicht deutschen Einrichtungen, ihre Beiträge in stabiler Höhe und in Euro an die TIB zu entrichten.

In den aktuellen Diskussionen um Open-Access-Infrastrukturen gibt es viele Appelle für den Betrieb wissenschaftsgetragener Publikationsangebote. Gleichzeitig gibt es wenig Ansätze für eine breit getragene und damit sicherere Finanzierung solcher Infrastruktur. Mit dem neuen Konsortium schaffen wir eine gute Möglichkeit für Einrichtungen, möglichst einfach zu unterstützen. Der Beitritt zum Konsortium ist weiterhin möglich. Wir freuen uns auf weitere Mitglieder.

Wir bedanken uns bei PKP und allen Mitgliedern dieses neuen Konsortiums. Unser gemeinsamer Einsatz kommt nicht nur unseren eigenen Einrichtungen zu Gute, sondern hilft dem Open-Access-Publizieren deutschlandweit und international. Damit leistet es auch einen Beitrag zur besseren Informationsversorgung deutscher Forschungseinrichtungen.

Hier finden Sie die PKP-Nachricht zum Start des Konsortiums: pkp.sfu.ca/news/

#PKP #TIBKonsortien #Finanzierung #OpenAccess #OffeneInfrastruktur #LizenzCCBY40INT #diamondOpenAccess #Konsortien #OJS
Public Knowledge Project Logo
2026-01-23

Strengthening open access infrastructure together: “PKP Open Journal Systems Germany 2026–2028” launched with 14 German academic institutions

diesen Beitrag auf Deutsch lesen

In January 2026, the new consortium “PKP Open Journal Systems Deutschland 2026–2028” has been launched. 14 institutions from Germany have jointly declared their support for the Public Knowledge Project (PKP) and committed to membership fees for the next three years. In this way, they are contributing to the sustainable and joint financing of relevant open-access infrastructure.

In autumn 2025, PKP and TIB called on academic organisations in Germany to join this initiative. Open Journal Systems (OJS)is the world’s most widely used software for scholarly publishing. It is an essential prerequisite for numerous academia-owned publishing services in Germany and thus enables a very large number of diamond open access publications. The consortium’s goal is to secure the development of this software and other relevant activities of PKP.

The following institutions have declared their membership at the outset:

  • BIS – Bibliotheks- und Informationssystem der Universität Oldenburg
  • Hochschulbibliothekszentrum des Landes NRW
  • Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin – Universitätsbibliothek
  • Technische Informationsbibliothek (TIB). Leibniz-Informationszentrum Technik und Naturwissenschaften und Universitätsbibliothek
  • Universität Heidelberg – Universitätsbibliothek
  • Universität Konstanz, Kommunikations-, Informations-, Medienzentrum (KIM) IT- und Bibliotheksdienste
  • Universitäts- und Stadtbibliothek Köln
  • Universitätsbibliothek Braunschweig
  • Universitätsbibliothek Clausthal
  • Universitätsbibliothek der Technischen Universität Berlin
  • Universitätsbibliothek Koblenz
  • Universitätsbibliothek Leipzig
  • Universitätsbibliothek Mannheim
  • Universitätsbibliothek Potsdam

All participating institutions become PKP members and can contribute to the PKP community and discussions. TIB organised the agreement, takes care of providing regular information to the consortium members, and enables German institutions to pay their contributions to TIB in a stable amount and in EUR.

In the current discussions about open access infrastructures, there are many calls for the operation of scholar-led, academia-owned publishing services. At the same time, there are few approaches for broadly supported and thus more secure financing of such infrastructure. With the new consortium, we are creating a good opportunity for institutions to provide support as easily as possible. It is still possible to join the consortium. We look forward to welcoming new members.

We would like to thank PKP and all members of this new consortium. Our joint efforts not only benefit our own institutions, but also help open access publishing throughout Germany and internationally. In this way, it also contributes to improving the supply of information to German academic institutions.

See PKP’s post here: pkp.sfu.ca/news/

#diamondOpenAccess #consortia #OJS #PKP #TIBConsortia #OpenInfrastructure #Funding #OpenAccess #LizenzCCBY40INT
Public Knowledge Project Logo
2026-01-22

#DiamondOpenAccess publishing at @TIBopenpub in #2025 included: two new journals, 10 new conference proceedings and about 350 articles. Many thanks to everyone involved!
#OpenByDefault #DiamondOA @tibhannover #publishing

Text reading: "Diamond Open Access publishing at TIB Open Publishing in 2025: - two new journals, - 10 new conference proceedings, about 350 articles. #OpenByDefault", followed by TIB Open Publishing logo in the lower right corner.
2026-01-22

Neu in der Pollux-Rubrik des #DVPWblog: @ihdl zeigt am
Open Gender Journal wie wissenschaftsgeleitetes Open Access Publizieren (ohne APC's für Auror*innen) umgesetzt werden kann:
▶️dvpw.de/blog/alternative-open-
#DiamondOpenAccess #DOA #PoWi

Milano University Pressmilanoup@mastodon.uno
2026-01-22

#CFP 📣

How do #data relate to #information, and how does information become a message? This is the theme of the first #CallForPapers of our new publication, #BibliotecaArtificiale, a journal for the study of #intelligence as a multifaceted, complex and layered entity.

💎 #DiamondOpenAccess — no fees for authors!
👀 Single-blind peer review
🌍 Open to contributions in Italian, English or French

More information here: riviste.unimi.it/index.php/bib

@cultura @tecnologia

logo di biblioteca artificiale
Catastrophe Risk & ResilienceJournalCRR@fediscience.org
2026-01-21

Our reasoning behind the #JCRR ethos is simple: we believe that to address global challenges requires open and transparent data and ideas.

Knowledge needs to be shared, best practice must be imparted; and it must be accessible to all. We look forward to continuing this journey in 2026 - and hope you will join us.

To learn more about our submission process and how you can get involved visit journalofcrr.com/

#DiamondOpenAccess

A stock image of two co-workers or co-researchers discussing data on a screen. Another team of two are visible in the out-of-focus area behind them.
2026-01-21

Der Diamond Open Access Standard (DOAS) ist jetzt auf Deutsch verfügbar!
Die Übersetzung macht einen zentralen Qualitätsrahmen für faires, gemeinwohlorientiertes Publizieren im deutschsprachigen Raum besser zugänglich.

Der DOAS definiert erstmals gemeinsame Standards für Diamond-Open-Access-Zeitschriften – von Governance und Finanzierung bis zu Diversität und Sichtbarkeit.

🗞️ Mehr Infos: open-access.network/services/n

#OpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccess #WissKomm #OpenScience #DiamondOA

Zwei Diamanten in unterschiedlichen Schliffen, sorgfältig von Pinzetten gehalten, repräsentieren die hohen Qualitätsstandards, die im wissenschaftlichen Publizieren angestrebt werden. Im Kontext von Diamond Open Access – einem Publikationsmodell, das kostenlosen Zugang zu Forschung ermöglicht – ist die Wahrung dieser Standards entscheidend, um Vertrauen und Glaubwürdigkeit zu gewährleisten.
2026-01-20

Wie steht es um Diamond Open Access in den Bundesländern? Ein neuer Veranstaltungsbericht im oa.blog fasst eine Online-Veranstaltung der Servicestelle Diamond Open Access (SeDOA) Online-Veranstaltung zusammen – mit Einblicken der Landesinitiativen @openaccess, @openaccess_bb, @oa_nrw und Open-Access-lnfopoint Schleswig-Holstein.

Welche Herausforderungen und welche Wünsche an SeDOA gibt es?
🔗 open-access.network/blog/diamo

#DiamondOpenAccess #OpenAccess #SeDOA #OpenScience #Bibliothek

Landkarte von Deutschoand mit den Bundesländern (Screenshot vom oa.atlas)
2026-01-17

Weekly Update from the Open Journal of Astrophysics – 17/01/2026

It’s Saturday once more so time for another update of activity at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Since the last update we have published seven papers, bringing the number in Volume 9 (2026) to 11 and the total so far published by OJAp up to 459. This week has been quite busy; for only the second time in recorded history we published at least one paper each working day.

I will continue to include the announcements made on our Mastodon account (on Fediscience) to encourage you to visit it. Mastodon is a really excellent service, and a more than adequate replacement for X/Twitter which nobody should be using.

The first three papers this week were all published on Monday January 12th in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies.

The first paper to report this week is “Rotational Kinematics in the Globular Cluster System of M31: Insights from Bayesian Inference” by Yuan (Cher) Li & Brendon J. Brewer (U. Auckland, New Zealand), Geraint F. Lewis (U. Sydney, Australia) and Dougal Mackey (independent researcher, Australia). This study uses Bayesian modelling to explore the kinematics of globular clusters in the Andromeda Galaxy, revealing distinct rotation patterns that suggest different subgroups were added at separate times.

The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the announcement on Fediverse here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115881522738421378

The second paper is “DESI Data Release 1: Stellar Catalogue” by Sergey Koposov (U. Edinburgh, UK) and an international cast of 67 other authors. This paper introduces and describes the stellar Value-Added Catalogue (VAC) based on DESI Data Release 1, providing measurements for over 4 million stars, including radial velocity, abundance, and stellar parameters.

The overlay for this one is here:

The official version of the paper can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115881586884465975

Next we have “On the origins of oxygen: ALMA and JWST characterise the multi-phase, metal-enriched, star-bursting medium within a ‘normal’ z>11 galaxy” by Joris Witstok (Cosmic Dawn Centre, Copenhagen, Denmark) and 37 others in locations dotted around the world. This paper presents new ALMA observations of the JADES-GS-z11-0 galaxy confirm the presence of the [O III] 88 µm line, suggesting it consists of two low-mass components undergoing star formation and enriched in metals.

The overlay is here:

The official version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement is here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115881659633273777

The fourth paper this week is also in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies. but was published on Tuesday 13th January. It is entitled “Accelerated calibration of semi-analytic galaxy formation models” by Andrew Robertson and Andrew Benson (Carnegie Observatories, USA). This paper presents a faster calibration framework for galaxy formation models, using fewer simulations for each evaluation. However, the model shows discrepancies suggesting the model needs to be made more flexible.

The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted version on arXiv here and the Mastodon announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115887131054018297

Next one up, published on Wednesday 14th January in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics, is “Constraints from CMB lensing tomography with projected bispectra” by Lea Harscouet & David Alonso (U. Oxford), UK), Andrina Nicola (U. Manchester, UK) and Anže Slosar (Brookhaven National Laboratory, USA). This study presents angular power spectra and bispectra of DESI luminous red galaxies, finding that the galaxy bispectrum can constrain the amplitude of matter fluctuations and the non-relativistic matter fraction. The overlay is here:

You can find the officially accepted paper on arXiv here and the Mastodon announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115893813149036197

The sixth paper this week is “Universal numerical convergence criteria for subhalo tidal evolution” by Barry T. Chiang & Frank C. van den Bosch (Yale U., USA) and Hsi-Yu Schive (National Taiwan University, Taiwan). This was published on Thursday 15th January in the folder Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics; it presents an analysis of a simulation suite that addresses the ‘overmerging’ problem in cosmological simulations of dark matter subhalos, showing that up to 50% of halos in state-of-the art simulations are unresolved. The overlay is here:

The final accepted version of this paper can be found on arXiv here. The Mastodon announcement follows:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115898339098021093

Finally for this week we have “Detectability of dark matter subhalo impacts in Milky Way stellar streams” by Junyang Lu , Tongyan Lin & Mukul Sholapurkar (UCSD, USA) and Ana Bonaca (Carnegie Observatories, USA). This was published on Friday 16th January (i.e. yesterday) in the folder Astrophysics of Galaxies. The study develops a method to estimate the minimum detectable dark matter subhalo mass in stellar streams, ranking them by sensitivity and identifying promising lines for further research.

The overlay is here:

The officially accepted version can be found on arXiv here and the Fediverse announcement here:

https://fediscience.org/@OJ_Astro/115904083514716420

That concludes the update for this week. I will do another next Saturday.

#ALMA #arXiv250207781v3 #arXiv250514787v3 #arXiv250707968v2 #arXiv250722888v4 #arXiv250900143v2 #arXiv251026901v2 #arXiv260105380v2 #AstrophysicsOfGalaxies #BayesianMethods #CosmologyAndNonGalacticAstrophysics #DarkEnergySurvey #darkMatter #DES #DiamondOpenAccess #DiamondOpenAccessPublishing #galaxyFormation #JWST #M31 #MilkyWay #OpenAccess #OpenAccessPublishing #OpenJournalOfAstrophysics #Oxygen #semiAnalyticModels #subhalos #TheOpenJournalOfAstrophysics #Tomography #weakGravitationalLensing

Stefan Müller :verified:stefanmuelller@climatejustice.social
2026-01-16

@langscipress hat 2026 auch Tschüss zu #twitter gesagt.

Schade um die 5000+Follower. Aber immerhin gibt es hier auch schon 800+.

Wenn Ihr Euch für #openAccess und wissenschaftsgeleitetes Publizieren interessiert, folgt mal #LangSciPress.

Das Wichtigste ist, dass die Zeitschriften den Wissenschaftler*innen gehören. Verlage können Dienstleister sein. Dann gibt es einen Markt und Wettbewerb für Leistungen, sonst nicht. Ist dann nur Abzocke mit bis zu 80% Gewinnmargen.

#DiamondOpenAccess

#eXit #twitterMigration

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