Scientists Discover Biggest Star
Hugh Pickens writes "Scientists at the University of Sheffield have discovered the most massive stellar giant, R136a1 measured at 265 solar masses, using the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in Chile and data from the Hubble Space Telescope. It's in the Tarantula Nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a small 'satellite' galaxy which orbits the Milky Way. Previously, the heaviest known stars were around 150 times the mass of the Sun, known as the 'Eddington Limit,' and this was believed to be close to the cosmic size limit because as stars get larger, the amount of energy created in their cores grows faster than the force of gravity which holds them together. 'Because of their proximity to the Eddington Limit they lose mass at a pretty high rate,' says Professor Paul Crowther, the chief researcher in the Sheffield team. Hyper-stars like R136a1 are believed to be formed from several young stars merging together, and are only found in the very heart of stellar clusters. R136a1 is believed to have a surface temperature of more than 40,000 degrees Celsius, and is 10 million times brighter than the Sun. Crowther adds that R136a1 is about as big as stars can get. 'Owing to the rarity of these monsters, I think it is unlikely that this new record will be broken any time soon.'"
For anyone curious, as I was, what the surface temperature of our star is: 5500 degrees C
My source was NASA's world book page (then again, it goes on to state that our solar system has nine planets, so trust NASA at your own risk)
If I had a nickel for every time I had a nickel, I'd be richcursive!
I puzzled over this for a bit too, but this newly discovered star is the most massive discovered. The largest known star in terms of size is still VY Canis Majoris at ~2000 solar radii, but only ~20 times the mass of the Sun.
Here is the link to the research paper: http://arxiv.org/abs/1007.3284
You are correct! I am an astronomer and want to straighten out a few things. When it comes to stars, MASS is what matters. Mass governs the size, lifetime, luminosity, and temperature of the star. To form a star gas clouds in the galaxy slowly collapse under their own gravity and form dense clumps, these clumps continue to collapse sometimes forming a single or multiple stars. In the centers of the largest star forming regions, these clumps are very dense and are close to each other which increases the probability that they will bump into each other and combine. This is one theory of how we can form the most massive stars, where several smaller, say 50-100 solar mass stars get squished together to form a so called 'hyper star' of several hundred solar masses. Once the star is formed it is on what we call the 'Main Sequence' where it will fuse hydrogen into helium in its core. At this time the star will have the hottest surface temperature of its life as well as the smallest physical size for its evolution. The reason a 'smaller' sized star can be so bright is the fact that luminosity (L) is related to the star's surface area (A) times the surface temperature (T) to the 4th power (L=A*T^4). Because this star is so hot, it can be 10 million times brighter than our sun but is maybe 10-100 times the physical size (radius). To continue evolving the star, as it ages the star will "puff up" and cool becoming a red hypergiant in this case. This is after it has used up all the hydrogen in its core. The star is headed for death but seems to keep roughly the same luminosity as it cools down and expands. If it cools from 80,000 Kelvin to 3,000 Kelvin then it must expand to 500,000 times its original surface area or 700 time larger in radius. This is why stars like VY CMaj and Alpha Ori (Betelgeuse) are so astronomically huge. They do not have to be extremely massive to become incredibly large in radius. VY CMaj is only 25 times the mass of our sun and is mind-bogglingly HUGE. Think of what a star 10 times more massive would look like when its on its death bed. If you live in the southern hemisphere when this new star dies, you will certainly see the supernova with your naked eye. So while in size this new star seems to be small in comparison to some nearby giants, when it is compared side by side its beyond anything we have seen before.