For decades, astronomers have known something strange about stars: as they age, they spin more slowly. A star that once rotated rapidly during its youth can end its life spinning 100 to 1,000 times slower. But exactly why this dramatic slowdown happens has remained one of astronomy’s biggest mysteries. Now, a new study from researchers at Kyoto University may finally provide a breakthrough explanation. Using advanced 3D simulations of massive stars, the team discovered how magnetic fields, convection, and rotation work together deep inside stars to control how fast they spin over time. Their findings, published in The Astrophysical Journal, could reshape our understanding of stellar evolution and even help scientists better predict how stars explode at the end of their lives. The Mystery of Slowing Stars Stars are not motionless objects. From the moment they form, they rotate. Some spin incredibly fast, completing a rotation in only a few hours or days. But observations show that stars...