Astronomers have Corruption (1983)been able to look at the sunand a handful of other stars in the Milky Way up close, thanks to modern advances in telescopes.
But getting a detailed view of a star outside the galaxy has eluded top scientists in the field, until now.
Using the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope Interferometer, astronomers have captured the first close-up picture of an extragalactic star. The image showcases WOH G64, a star some 160,000 light-yearsaway from Earth in space. It beams in the constellation Dorado from the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small galaxy on the periphery of the Milky Way.
And it seems researchers have caught it just in time. The image documents the star as it was 160,000 years ago, not as it is today. That means the star has likely already died, Jacco van Loon, reader in astrophysics at Keele University in the United Kingdom, told Mashable.
It's as if the astronomers had a time machine and were able to travel back to the moment just before certain doom.
"The signal of the explosion is on its way," said van Loon, one of the co-authors of the study. "WOH G64 is losing mass at such a high rate, it wouldn't last 160,000 years, and the extreme red supergiant phase it is in, for such a massive star, also doesn't last as long. The changes we are seeing now suggest we may see it explode within the next few thousand years, or even within our lifetime."
SEE ALSO: NASA thinks it found a moon light-years away spewing gasWOH G64 is what's known as a red giant, a star nearing the end of its life, running out of hydrogen fuel. Through this process, aging stars expand about 100 to 1,000 times their original size. But this particular star is what's sometimes called a red supergiant because it's so exceptionally huge.
Nicknamed the "behemoth star," WOH G64 is actually about 2,000 times larger than the sun. Like other red giants, it has shed outer layersof gas and dust. Curiously, the star appears to have grown dimmer over the past decade, encouraging scientists to keep a closer eye on it.
"The signal of the explosion is on its way."
That relative faintness probably means the end is nigh. More and more heavy material will build up on the core. The pile eventually reaches a tipping point, causing the core to collapse under its own gravity. The outer layers of the star then blast into the cosmos as a supernova. Such a violent explosion can sometimes appear brighter than a whole galaxy.
To the research team's surprise, the star is wrapped in an egg-like cocoon of dust. The odd stretched shape of the dusty nebula could be due to the shedding process. Another possible explanation is that an unseen companion star is influencing it. The scientists' findingsare described in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
"We are excited because this may be related to the drastic ejection of material from the dying star before a supernova explosion," said Keiichi Ohnaka, lead author from the Universidad Andrés Bello in Chile, in a statement.
To take the picture, the team used one of the telescope's sophisticated instruments, dubbed GRAVITY, which can capture the light of four telescopes. But as the starlight grows fainter, getting new images will become even more challenging. A planned upgradeto the instrument should enhance its sensitivity soon, according to ESO, allowing researchers to continue monitoring the behemoth at its bitter end.
Collins vs. Jabeur 2025 livestream: Watch Adelaide International for freeBest Amazon deal: Save $35 on a 10Samsung, LG TVs are getting Microsoft Copilot AI featuresBoston Celtics vs. Denver Nuggets 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineMiami Heat vs. Golden State Warriors 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineCES 2025: Here's John Deere's new autonomous fleetCES 2025: Dreame's X50 Ultra can climb stairs. Kind of.Best free online courses from MITSamsung, LG TVs are getting Microsoft Copilot AI featuresBest LG TV deal: Save $230 on LG 65OnePlus 13 arrives. What reviewers are saying.Best laptop deal: Save $390.99 on the Lenovo IdeaPad 3iCES 2025: Acer's new Aspire Vero 16 laptop has oyster shells in itNvidia vs. AMD: Which graphics card takes the top spot?Best mobile controller: Get the Razer Kishi V2 mobile controller for $60 off at AmazonBest Apple Watch deal: Save $50 on Apple Watch SE (2nd Gen)Qualcomm has unveiled the new, budgetCES Nvidia keynote livestream: How to watch, what to expectCES 2025: Nvidia Blackwell RTX 50NYT Connections hints and answers for January 7: Tips to solve 'Connections' #576. Becoming Kathy Acker: An Interview with Olivia Laing A Conversation Between Nell Painter and Lynne Tillman by Nell Painter and Lynne Tillman The Sad Boys of Sadcore by Kristi Coulter Tom Clark (1941–2018) by Larry Bensky Does Bad Romance Lead to Great Art? by Cody Delistraty Staff Picks: Portraiture, Patriarchy, Public Works Ugliness Is Underrated: Ugly Design by Katy Kelleher My Mother and Me (and J. M. Coetzee) by Ceridwen Dovey Seven Books I’ll Never Read Writers’ Fridges: Walter Mosley Feminize Your Canon: Violet Trefusis by Emma Garman Staff Picks: Jewel Thieves and Drunken Companions by The Paris Review Cracked Fairy Tales and the Holocaust by Sabrina Orah Mark Schiele, Shoes, and Kavanaugh by Larissa Pham Staff Picks: Butt Fumbles, Bounty Hunters, and Black Is Literature Dead? by David L. Ulin Beyond Hygge: An Interview with Dorthe Nors by Alexandra Pereira Staff Picks: Film Forum, Fallout Shelters, and Fermentation The Godmother of Flash Fiction by Bradley Babendir Looking for Lorraine by Imani Perry
2.3974s , 10133.4140625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Corruption (1983)】,Exquisite Information Network