Space photo of the week: Webb telescope spies ‘super star cluster’ | Space

What it is: super star cluster Westerlund 1

Where it is: 12,000 light-years away in the constellation Ara.

When it was shared: Oct. 3, 2024

Why it’s so special:

Westerlund 1 is a galactic factory of epic proportions. Visible from Earth’s Southern Hemisphere just below the tail of the Scorpion — and close to the core of the Milky Way — it’s the largest known star cluster in our galaxy.

It’s the ultimate example of a “super star cluster.” While most such clusters are about 10,000 times the sun’s mass, Westerlund 1 is 50,000 to 100,000 times the solar mass. Some of its hundreds of very massive stars are 2,000 times larger than our sun. If they were in the solar system, they would reach as far as the orbit of Saturn and shine 1 million times brighter than the sun. If Earth orbited a star within Westerlund 1, our night sky would be full of hundreds of stars as bright as the full moon.

Astronomers think that within the next 40 million years — the blink of an eye in cosmic terms — more than 1,500 supernovae (stars exploding at the end of their lives) will light up Westerlund 1. Right now, the cluster is about 3.5 million to 5 million years old.

This image was announced as the latest James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) Picture of the Month and published as both a wide-field view and a panning video

Source www.livescience.com

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