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Scientists find 'monster' star


Published Date: July 22, 2010 

LONDON: The most massive star ever, which is up to 20 million times brighter 
than the Sun, has been discovered using the Very Large Telescope in Chile, 
scientists in Britain said yesterday. The star, named R136a1, is thought to 
have started off with a mass of up to 320 times that of the Sun and the new 
discovery has doubled the previously accepted limit of solar mass.

Although it has since shed some of its weight, it is so powerful that if it 
replaced the Sun as the centre of our solar system, it would make life on Earth 
impossible because of the strength of its ultraviolet radiation. R136a1 was 
discovered as part of a series of massive stars found in two young star 
clusters by a team of astronomers led by Professor Paul Crowther of Sheffield 
University in northern England.

Unlike humans, these stars are born heavy and lose weight as they age," 
Crowther said. "Being a little over a million years old, the most extreme star 
R136a1 is already middle-aged and has undergone an intense weight loss program, 
shedding a fifth of its initial mass over that time, or more than 50 solar 
masses. "Owing to the rarity of these monsters, I think it is unlikely that 
this new record will be broken any time soon.

Crowther added that astronomers faced a challenge to work out how the stars 
originated. "Either they were born so big or smaller stars merged together to 
produce them," he said. The Very Large Telescope project, in the Atacama Desert 
in northern Chile, is operated by the European Southern Observatory (ESO). It 
features four eight-meter diameter telescopes and is described by the ESO as 
"the world's biggest eye on the sky".

Researchers studied the stars using it plus data from the NASA/European Space 
Agency's Hubble Space Telescope. The research, conducted by scientists from 
Britain, Malaysia and Germany, was published in scientific journal The Monthly 
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. - AFP

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