How massive can stars be? Big, hefty stars live short violent lives that can profoundly affect their environments. Isolating a massive star can be problematic, however, since what seems to be a single
bright star might actually turn out to be several stars close together. Such was the case for two of the brightest objects visible in the
open star cluster Trumpler 16, located in the southern Carina Nebula. Upon close inspection by the
Hubble Space Telescope,
WR 25, the brightest object in the
above image, was confirmed to consist of at least two separate stars. Additionally, Tr16 -244, just to the upper right of
WR 25, was resolved for the first time to be at least three individual stars. Even so, the brightest star in
WR 25 appears to be about 50 times the mass of our Sun, making it one of the more massive stars known.
Winds from these stars are likely significant contributers to the large bubble that the star cluster sits in. The
Carina Nebula, home to unusually shaped dust clouds and the famous
variable star Eta Carina, lies about 7,500
light years away toward the constellation of
Ship's Keel (
Carina).