Wednesday, July 16, 2025

SPACE/COSMOS

Lunar soil could support life on the Moon




Cell Press

Photothermal reactor with lunar soil 

image: 

Chang’E-5 lunar soil sitting at the bottom of a photothermal reactor.

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Credit: Sun et al.





Scientists have developed a technology that may help humans survive on the Moon. In a study publishing July 16 in the Cell Press journal Joule, researchers extracted water from lunar soil and used it to convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and chemicals for fuel—potentially opening new doors for future deep space exploration by mitigating the need to transport essential resources like water and fuel all the way from Earth. 

“We never fully imagined the ‘magic’ that the lunar soil possessed,” said Lu Wang of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen. “The biggest surprise for us was the tangible success of this integrated approach. The one-step integration of lunar H2O extraction and photothermal CO2 catalysis could enhance energy utilization efficiency and decrease the cost and complexity of infrastructure development.” 

Space agencies have floated the idea of using the Moon as an outpost for far-flung explorations of the cosmos for decades. However, the need to supply such a base with adequate resources to support its inhabitants—especially water—has been a barrier to making it a reality. A single gallon of water costs about $83,000 to ship by rocket, according to the study, with each astronaut drinking about four gallons per day.  

Soil samples analyzed from the Chang’E-5 mission provide evidence of water on the lunar surface, which the authors suggest could allow human explorers to harness the Moon’s natural resources to meet their needs while avoiding the costs and logistical challenges of transporting those resources. However, previously developed strategies for extracting water from lunar soil involved multiple energy-intensive steps and didn’t break down CO2 for fuel and other essential uses.  

To advance this research, Wang and colleagues developed a technology that would both extract water from lunar soil and directly use it to convert the CO2 exhaled by astronauts into carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen gas, which could then be used to make fuels and oxygen for the astronauts to breathe. The technology accomplishes this feat through a novel photothermal strategy, which converts light from the Sun into heat. 

The scientists tested the technology using lunar soil samples gathered during the Chang’E mission as well as simulated lunar samples and a batch reactor filled with CO2 gas that used a light-concentrating system to drive the photothermal process. The team used ilmenite, a heavy black mineral and one of several reported water reservoirs in lunar soil, to measure photothermal activity and analyze the mechanisms of the process. 

Despite the technology’s success in the lab, the extreme lunar environment still poses challenges that will complicate its usage on the Moon, according to the authors, including drastic temperature fluctuations, intense radiation, and low gravity. Additionally, lunar soil in its natural environment does not have a uniform composition, which leads to it having inconsistent properties, while CO2 from astronauts’ exhalations might not be enough to offer a basis for all the water, fuel, and oxygen they need. Technological limitations also continue to present a barrier, with current catalytic performance still insufficient to fully support human life in environments beyond Earth, said Wang. 

“Overcoming these technical hurdles and significant associated costs in development, deployment, and operation will be crucial to realizing sustainable lunar water utilization and space exploration,” the authors write. 

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Joule, Sun et al., “Inherent lunar water enabled photothermal CO2 catalysis” https://www.cell.com/joule/fulltext/S2542-4351(25)00187-4 

This research was supported by funding from the National Key R&D Program of China, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, The Program for Guangdong Introducing Innovative and Entrepreneurial Teams, the Special Fund for the Sci-tech Innovation Strategy of Guangdong Province, the Guangdong Basic Research Center of Excellence for Aggregate Science, The Shenzhen Natural Science Foundation, The Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Eco-materials and Renewable Energy, the NSF of Jiangsu Province, and the University Development Fund. 

Joule (@Joule_CP), published monthly by Cell Press, is a home for outstanding and insightful research, analysis, and ideas addressing the need for more sustainable energy. A sister journal to CellJoule spans all scales of energy research, from fundamental laboratory research into energy conversion and storage to impactful analysis at the global level. Visit http://www.cell.com/joule. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com

For the first time, astronomers witness the dawn of a new solar system




ESO

ALMA image of HOPS-315, a still-forming planetary system 

image: 

This is HOPS-315, a baby star where astronomers have observed evidence for the earliest stages of planet formation. The image was taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), in which ESO is a partner. Together with data from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), these observations show that hot minerals are beginning to solidify.

In orange we see the distribution of carbon monoxide, blowing away from the star in a butterfly-shaped wind. In blue we see a narrow jet of silicon monoxide, also beaming away from the star. These gaseous winds and jets are common around baby stars like HOPS-315.

Together the ALMA and JWST observations indicate that, in addition to these features, there is also a disc of gaseous silicon monoxide around the star that is condensing into solid silicates –– the first stages of planetary formation.

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Credit: ALMA(ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/M. McClure et al.





International researchers have, for the first time, pinpointed the moment when planets began to form around a star beyond the Sun. Using the ALMA telescope, in which the European Southern Observatory (ESO) is a partner, and the James Webb Space Telescope, they have observed the creation of the first specks of planet-forming material — hot minerals just beginning to solidify. This finding marks the first time a planetary system has been identified at such an early stage in its formation and opens a window to the past of our own Solar System.

"For the first time, we have identified the earliest moment when planet formation is initiated around a star other than our Sun,” says Melissa McClure, a professor at Leiden University in the Netherlands and lead author of the new study, published today in Nature.

Co-author Merel van ‘t Hoff, a professor at Purdue University, USA, compares their findings to "a picture of the baby Solar System", saying that “we're seeing a system that looks like what our Solar System looked like when it was just beginning to form.”

This newborn planetary system is emerging around HOPS-315, a ‘proto’ or baby star that sits some 1300 light-years away from us and is an analogue of the nascent Sun. Around such baby stars, astronomers often see discs of gas and dust known as ‘protoplanetary discs’, which are the birthplaces of new planets. While astronomers have previously seen young discs that contain newborn, massive, Jupiter-like planets, McClure says, “we've always known that the first solid parts of planets, or ‘planetesimals’, must form further back in time, at earlier stages.”

In our Solar System, the very first solid material to condense near Earth’s present location around the Sun is found trapped within ancient meteorites. Astronomers age-date these primordial rocks to determine when the clock started on our Solar System’s formation. Such meteorites are packed full of crystalline minerals that contain silicon monoxide (SiO) and can condense at the extremely high temperatures present in young planetary discs. Over time, these newly condensed solids bind together, sowing the seeds for planet formation as they gain both size and mass. The first kilometre-sized planetesimals in the Solar System, which grew to become planets such as Earth or Jupiter’s core, formed just after the condensation of these crystalline minerals.

With their new discovery, astronomers have found evidence of these hot minerals beginning to condense in the disc around HOPS-315. Their results show that SiO is present around the baby star in its gaseous state, as well as within these crystalline minerals, suggesting it is only just beginning to solidify. "This process has never been seen before in a protoplanetary disc — or anywhere outside our Solar System," says co-author Edwin Bergin, a professor at the University of Michigan, USA.

These minerals were first identified using the James Webb Space Telescope, a joint project of the US, European and Canadian space agencies. To find out where exactly the signals were coming from, the team observed the system with ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, which is operated by ESO together with international partners in Chile’s Atacama Desert.

With these data, the team determined that the chemical signals were coming from a small region of the disc around the star equivalent to the orbit of the asteroid belt around the Sun. “We're really seeing these minerals at the same location in this extrasolar system as where we see them in asteroids in the Solar System,“ says co-author Logan Francis, a postdoctoral researcher at Leiden University.

Because of this, the disc of HOPS-315 provides a wonderful analogue for studying our own cosmic history. As van ‘t Hoff says, “this system is one of the best that we know to actually probe some of the processes that happened in our Solar System." It also provides astronomers with a new opportunity to study early planet formation, by standing in as a substitute for newborn solar systems across the galaxy.

ESO astronomer and European ALMA Programme Manager Elizabeth Humphreys, who did not take part in the study, says: “I was really impressed by this study, which reveals a very early stage of planet formation. It suggests that HOPS-315 can be used to understand how our own Solar System formed. This result highlights the combined strength of JWST and ALMA for exploring protoplanetary discs.”

More information

This research was presented in the paper “Refractory solid condensation detected in an embedded protoplanetary disk” (doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09163-z) to appear in Nature.

The team is composed of M. K. McClure (Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, The Netherlands [Leiden]), M. van ’t Hoff (Department of Astronomy, The University of Michigan, Michigan, USA [Michigan] and Purdue University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Indiana, USA), L. Francis (Leiden), Edwin Bergin (Michigan), W.R. M. Rocha (Leiden), J. A. Sturm (Leiden), D. Harsono (Institute of Astronomy, Department of Physics, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan), E. F. van Dishoeck (Leiden), J. H. Black (Chalmers University of Technology, Department of Space, Earth and Environment, Onsala Space Observatory, Sweden), J. A. Noble (Physique des Interactions Ioniques et Moléculaires, CNRS, Aix Marseille Université, France), D. Qasim (Southwest Research Institute, Texas, USA), E. Dartois (Institut des Sciences Moléculaires d’Orsay, CNRS, Université Paris-Saclay, France.)

The Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of ESO, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) and the National Institutes of Natural Sciences (NINS) of Japan in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA is funded by ESO on behalf of its Member States, by NSF in cooperation with the National Research Council of Canada (NRC) and the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC) in Taiwan and by NINS in cooperation with the Academia Sinica (AS) in Taiwan and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI). ALMA construction and operations are led by ESO on behalf of its Member States; by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), managed by Associated Universities, Inc. (AUI), on behalf of North America; and by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) on behalf of East Asia. The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and operation of ALMA.

The European Southern Observatory (ESO) enables scientists worldwide to discover the secrets of the Universe for the benefit of all. We design, build and operate world-class observatories on the ground — which astronomers use to tackle exciting questions and spread the fascination of astronomy — and promote international collaboration for astronomy. Established as an intergovernmental organisation in 1962, today ESO is supported by 16 Member States (Austria, Belgium, Czechia, Denmark, France, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom), along with the host state of Chile and with Australia as a Strategic Partner. ESO’s headquarters and its visitor centre and planetarium, the ESO Supernova, are located close to Munich in Germany, while the Chilean Atacama Desert, a marvellous place with unique conditions to observe the sky, hosts our telescopes. ESO operates three observing sites: La Silla, Paranal and Chajnantor. At Paranal, ESO operates the Very Large Telescope and its Very Large Telescope Interferometer, as well as survey telescopes such as VISTA. Also at Paranal ESO will host and operate the Cherenkov Telescope Array South, the world’s largest and most sensitive gamma-ray observatory. Together with international partners, ESO operates ALMA on Chajnantor, a facility that observes the skies in the millimetre and submillimetre range. At Cerro Armazones, near Paranal, we are building “the world’s biggest eye on the sky” — ESO’s Extremely Large Telescope. From our offices in Santiago, Chile we support our operations in the country and engage with Chilean partners and society.

Links


Skimming the Sun, probe sheds light on space weather threats

COWABUNGA MAN, SURF'S UP


By AFP
July 15, 2025


This photo provided by NASA on July 15, 2025, was taken by Parker Solar Probe's WISPR instrument during its record-breaking flyby of the Sun, showing the solar wind racing out from the Sun's corona, or outer atmosphere. — © AFP PHILIPPE LOPEZ


Issam AHMED

Eruptions of plasma piling atop one another, solar wind streaming out in exquisite detail — the closest-ever images of our Sun are a gold mine for scientists.

Captured by the Parker Solar Probe during its closest approach to our star starting on December 24, 2024, the images were recently released by NASA and are expected to deepen our understanding of space weather and help guard against solar threats to Earth.

– A historic achievement –

“We have been waiting for this moment since the late Fifties,” Nour Rawafi, project scientist for the mission at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, told AFP.

Previous spacecraft have studied the Sun, but from much farther away.

Parker was launched in 2018 and is named after the late physicist Eugene Parker, who in 1958 theorized the existence of the solar wind — a constant stream of electrically charged particles that fan out through the solar system.

The probe recently entered its final orbit where its closest approach takes it to just 3.8 million miles from the Sun’s surface — a milestone first achieved on Christmas Eve 2024 and repeated twice since on an 88-day cycle.

To put the proximity in perspective: if the distance between Earth and the Sun measured one foot, Parker would be hovering just half an inch away.

Its heat shield was engineered to withstand up to 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit (1,370 degrees Celsius) — but to the team’s delight, it has only experienced around 2,000F (1090C) so far, revealing the limits of theoretical modeling.

Remarkably, the probe’s instruments, just a yard (meter) behind the shield, remain at little more than room temperature.

– Staring at the Sun –

The spacecraft carries a single imager, the Wide-Field Imager for Solar Probe (WISPR), which captured data as Parker plunged through the Sun’s corona, or outer atmosphere.

Stitched into a seconds-long video, the new images reveal coronal mass ejections (CMEs) — massive bursts of charged particles that drive space weather — in high resolution for the first time.

“We had multiple CMEs piling up on top of each other, which is what makes them so special,” Rawafi said. “It’s really amazing to see that dynamic happening there.”

Such eruptions triggered the widespread auroras seen across much of the world last May, as the Sun reached the peak of its 11-year cycle.



This photo provided by NASA on July 15, 2025, was taken by Parker Solar Probe’s WISPR instrument during its record-breaking flyby of the Sun, showing the solar wind racing out from the Sun’s corona, or outer atmosphere – Copyright AFP PHILIPPE LOPEZ

Another striking feature is how the solar wind, flowing from the left of the image, traces a structure called the heliospheric current sheet: an invisible boundary where the Sun’s magnetic field flips from north to south.

It extends through the solar system in the shape of a twirling skirt and is critical to study, as it governs how solar eruptions propagate and how strongly they can affect Earth.

– Why it matters –


Space weather can have serious consequences, such as overwhelming power grids, disrupting communications, and threatening satellites.

As thousands more satellites enter orbit in the coming years, tracking them and avoiding collisions will become increasingly difficult — especially during solar disturbances, which can cause spacecraft to drift slightly from their intended orbits.

Rawafi is particularly excited about what lies ahead, as the Sun heads toward the minimum of its cycle, expected in five to six years.

Historically, some of the most extreme space weather events have occurred during this declining phase — including the infamous Halloween Solar Storms of 2003, which forced astronauts aboard the International Space Station to shelter in a more shielded area.

“Capturing some of these big, huge eruptions…would be a dream,” he said.

Parker still has far more fuel than engineers initially expected and could continue operating for decades — until its solar panels degrade to the point where they can no longer generate enough power to keep the spacecraft properly oriented.

When its mission does finally end, the probe will slowly disintegrate — becoming, in Rawafi’s words, “part of the solar wind itself.”





Simple rules govern soil microbiome responses to environmental change



Research from UChicago shows how environmental changes lead to predictable responses in soil microbiome metabolism



 News Release 

University of Chicago





Just like any living organism, the soil has its own metabolism. Plants, worms, insects, and most importantly, microorganisms in the soil, break down organic matter, consume and generate nutrients, and process other materials to give the soil a life of its own. Soil microbiomes, which drive much of the metabolism in these ecosystems, are immensely complex – comprised of thousands of species with untold interactions and dynamics.

Given the complexity of the soil, however, it can be nearly impossible to understand how the communities of microbes living there respond to changes in the environment, such as temperature, moisture, acidity, and nutrient availability. Solving this problem is critical if we want to understand how soil microbiomes adapt to ever-changing environmental conditions and climate change.

New research from the University of Chicago shows that a deceptively simple mathematical model can describe how the soil responds to environmental change. Using just two variables, the model shows that changes in pH levels consistently result in three distinct metabolic states of the community.

The study, published this week in Nature, highlights how describing the collective behavior of complex systems mathematically can cut through the complexity, enabling predictions of how the soil and its metabolism will respond to change.  Ultimately, this will help scientists design interventions for improving agriculture or restoring ecosystems.

“When people think about these ecosystems, they assume you have to write down a mathematical description of the entire system, which involves thousands of variables, interacting species, and the resources they're consuming,” said Seppe Kuehn, PhD, Associate Professor of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Chicago, and the senior author of the paper. “So, the fact that we were able to describe this in a simple way was extremely intellectually satisfying.”

A herculean effort to analyze the soil

The study is the result of a herculean effort by Kiseok Lee, a graduate student in Kuehn’s lab. He sampled 20 natural soils across the pH gradient from Cook Agronomy Farm in Pullman, Washington, that have large natural variations in pH but few differences in other environmental factors. Then, he manipulated each native soil’s pH by small increments in the lab, resulting in 1,500 microcosm experiments.

The pH level is a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution. Lower pH means more acidic (more hydrogen ions), and higher pH means more basic or alkaline (fewer hydrogen ions).

Levels of pH in the soil are important because they affect the types of microorganisms living there, their metabolic activity, and the soil’s chemistry. The researchers wanted to test the effects of changing pH on anaerobic nitrate respiration, which is the process by which anaerobic microbes (i.e. ones that don’t require oxygen) use nitrate to generate energy. Nitrate respiration is a key metabolic process in agriculture and soil health.

Lee painstakingly placed samples onto plates, each with 48 wells for holding the soil, along with some water, nitrates, and acid or base solution to change the pH. Preparing and incubating the samples took months. After that, Lee took time-series measurements of nitrate in each microcosm—a total of 15,000 measurements, all by hand. “I was the machine,” Lee said, when asked if he was able to automate any of the sampling and testing.

Deceptively simple modeling

Lee and Kuehn worked with Siqi Liu, PhD, co-first author and a former graduate student in the lab of study co-corresponding author Madhav Mani, PhD, Associate Professor of Engineering Sciences and Applied Mathematics at Northwestern University, along with co-corresponding author Mikhail Tikhonov, PhD, Associate Professor of Physics at Washington University in St. Louis.

The team created a model to describe the dynamics in each of the 1,500 samples as they metabolized the nitrate. They found that a simple model predicted the activity with just two parameters: indigenous biomass activity and the amount of growth-limiting nutrient available. Depending on how the pH was changed, they saw three consistent results:

  • Regime I, or the “acidic death regime”:  Large changes toward acidity caused the death of functional biomass
  • Regime II, “nutrient-limiting regime”: During moderate changes, acidic or basic, the nitrate metabolism was limited by the availability of a limiting nutrient (carbon), resulting in linear nitrate dynamics
  • Regime III, “resurgent growth regime”: Large changes toward basic conditions caused dominant groups of microbes to become less active, while rare groups rapidly grew and metabolized nitrate exponentially

“No matter how you perturb the pH, there's just these three dynamic classes of behavior that the whole ecosystem can exhibit. Outside of that, it doesn't look like anything else is allowed,” Kuehn said. “That's really quite striking, because you have all this complexity at the lower level giving rise to this relative simplicity at the higher level.”

“This connects to an important theoretical question: when is it OK to summarize dozens of diverse species with a single coarse model?” Tikhonov said. “Here, Kiseok and Siqi managed to show that a coarsened description is not only an excellent approximation of the data but captures something general about community response to perturbations.”

Putting the new model to use

Understanding how the soil microbiome responds to these changes is useful for designing interventions. For example, if nitrogen fertilizer runoff from farms contaminates nearby waterways, officials could take measures to increase pH and remove excess nitrate to prevent algae blooms.

“If you want to understand how these systems are going to respond to future perturbations, then delimiting the set of possible responses is obviously very useful,” Kuehn said.

The researchers also think the same modeling approach can be applied to other environmental factors.

“Focusing on the resilience of the community, which is expressed by biomass activity and the limiting nutrient, shows us that different amounts of perturbations will elicit different effects,” Lee said. “I think this means that we can apply it to elucidating functional responses in other microbial systems against different environmental changes, whether it be from temperature, pH, salinity, or something else.”

The study, “Functional regimes define soil microbiome response to environmental change,” was supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Institute for General Medical Sciences, the Center for Living Systems at UChicago, the National Institute for Mathematics and Theory in Biology, the Simons Foundation, and the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative. Additional authors include Kyle Crocker and Jocelyn Wang from UChicago and David Huggins from the United States Department of Agriculture.

 

Researchers track the willingness of gun owners to temporarily store guns outside their homes



Rutgers University



Rutgers researchers have found that firearm owners are more likely to consider temporary out-of-home storage when worried about the safety of others.

Their study reveals that firearm owners prioritize the safety of household members over their own self-protection when deciding whether to temporarily store their firearms outside the home. At the same time, many remain concerned about leaving the home defenseless.

Researchers surveyed 3,018 U.S. adults living in households with firearms through an online survey. The respondents were asked who lived in a home with a firearm and their willingness to temporarily store their firearms with either firearm retailers or law enforcement.

The findings illustrate that firearm owners and their family members were willing to store with retailers. Thirty-four percent of the respondents said they were willing to store their firearms with law enforcement agencies.

“Our findings show that firearm owners are more willing to temporarily store their firearms with retailers and law enforcement when they're concerned about protecting others in their household rather than themselves, but are also concerned about leaving the home unprotected,” said Jennifer Paruk, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral fellow at the New Jersey Gun Violence Research Center. “This suggests that providers should emphasize how voluntary, temporary storage can keep loved ones safe while highlighting the short-term nature of this storage."

The researchers said installing lockers within firearm retailers may increase willingness for voluntary, temporary out-of-home storage.

“Several states now provide online maps that show firearm retailers and law enforcement agencies who have indicated that may accept temporary storage requests,” Paruk said.

Experts at the New Jersey Gun Violence Research Center have developed a New Jersey firearm storage map of places throughout the state for temporary, voluntary firearm storage based on 2021 data.

 

Estimated burden of influenza and direct and indirect benefits of influenza vaccination




JAMA Network Open





About The Study:

 In this analytical model study, influenza vaccination provided substantial benefit in reducing infections to both the vaccinated and unvaccinated portions of the population. Even when both vaccine effectiveness and vaccine uptake were low, vaccination showed marked reductions in disease burden for transmission levels characteristic of seasonal influenza. However, when the level of transmission was very high, even a highly effective vaccine did not protect unvaccinated individuals. These findings underscore the importance of vaccination in disease prevention and control and show that indirect benefits are limited in high transmission situations. 



Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Mary G. Krauland, PhD, email mgk8@pitt.edu.

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/

(doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.21324)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

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About JAMA Network Open: JAMA Network Open is an online-only open access general medical journal from the JAMA Network. On weekdays, the journal publishes peer-reviewed clinical research and commentary in more than 40 medical and health subject areas. Every article is free online from the day of publication. 

 

Immigrants in U.S. earn 10.6% less than native-born workers, but biggest driver is job access, not wage discrimination 



UMass Amherst labor expert finds access to high-paying jobs—not unequal pay for the same job—is the biggest driver of immigrant wage gaps 




University of Massachusetts Amherst

Donald Tomaskovic-Devey 

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Donald Tomaskovic-Devey

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Credit: University of Massachusetts Amherst





AMHERST, Mass. — Immigrants in the United States earn 10.6% less than similarly educated U.S.-born workers, largely because they are concentrated in lower-paying industries, occupations and companies, according to a major new study published today in Nature, co-authored by a University of Massachusetts Amherst sociologist who studies equal opportunity in employment. The research—one of the most comprehensive global comparisons of immigrant labor market integration to date—analyzes linked employer-employee data from over 13 million people across nine advanced economies in Europe and North America.

The U.S. results, drawn from a unique combination of Census Bureau, earnings and employer data, reveal that only about one-quarter of the wage gap is due to pay inequality within the same job and company. Instead, the majority stems from structural barriers that limit immigrants’ access to better-paying workplaces.

“These findings are important because they show that most of the immigrant wage gap isn’t about being paid less for the same work—it’s about not getting into the highest-paying jobs and firms in the first place,” says Donald Tomaskovic-Devey, professor of sociology and founding director of the Center for Employment Equity at UMass Amherst.

Key U.S. Findings

  • First-generation immigrants with legal status in the U.S. earn 10.6% less than comparable native-born workers.
  • 3.4%, a third of that gap, is attributable to unequal pay for the same job at the same employer.
  • No data was available on second-generation immigrants in the U.S., but other countries showed persistent but smaller gaps into the next generation.


The study suggests that efforts to close immigrant wage gaps should focus on increasing immigrants’ access to better jobs and firms. Promising approaches include:

  • Language and skills training
  • Recognition of foreign credentials
  • Access to professional networks
  • Employer anti-bias interventions

“Improving job access is essential,” says co-author Andrew Penner, professor of sociology at the University of California, Irvine. “This means addressing the barriers that keep immigrants out of the highest-paying firms and occupations.”

As of 2023, immigrants constituted approximately 14% of the U.S. population, totaling over 47 million people. There are approximately 1 million new long-term permanent residents annually. U.S. immigration policy encompasses diverse pathways, including family-based migration, employment-based visas, the Diversity Visa Lottery and humanitarian protection. Immigration has been a defining feature of the U.S. population since its founding, with distinct waves shaped by economic needs, political developments and global conflicts.

“For almost 250 years, we have been a nation of immigrants, and this pay gap indicates that we can do more as a country to help people following the paths of our forebears realize the American dream,” Tomaskovic-Devey adds.

Global Comparison

The study includes 13.5 million individuals in nine immigrant-receiving countries: the U.S., Canada, France, Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Spain and Sweden.

The U.S. had one of the smallest pay gaps (10.6%) among the nine countries studied. By contrast, Canada showed a 27.5% gap and Spain a 29.3% gap. The most favorable outcomes for immigrants were in Sweden (7% gap) and Denmark (9.2%).

The authors identify two main sources of the immigrant-native pay gap:

  1. Sorting—Immigrants are more likely to work in lower-paying industries, occupations and firms.
  2. Within-job inequality—In all countries immigrants are paid less than natives doing the same job for the same employer, but these gaps are relatively small.

Across the nine countries, three-quarters of the 17.9% average wage gap for immigrants was due to sorting; just one-quarter stemmed from unequal pay within jobs. In the U.S., this pattern was consistent: structural job access—not wage discrimination—was the dominant force.

The study also exposes persistent disadvantages for immigrants from certain world regions, including Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. Across all countries, immigrants from these regions faced larger wage gaps than immigrants from Western or Asian countries.

The international research is the latest in a series of high-profile publications from a team spanning over a dozen countries in North America and Europe that has been investigating the dynamics of workplace earnings distributions for the last decade.