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Pistol Star

Pistol Star
Pistol star and nebula.jpg
False-color image of the Pistol Star and Pistol Nebula
Credit: HST NICMOS
Observation data
Epoch J2000      Equinox J2000
Constellation Sagittarius
Right ascension 17h 46m 15.3s
Declination −28° 50′ 04″
Apparent magnitude (V) >28
Characteristics
Spectral type LBV
Apparent magnitude (J) 11.828
Apparent magnitude (H) 8.920
Apparent magnitude (K) 7.291
Variable type cLBV
Astrometry
Radial velocity (Rv) +130 km/s
Distance 8,000pc
Details
Mass 27.5 M
Radius 306 R
Luminosity 1,600,000 L
Temperature 11,800 K
Metallicity [Fe/H] 0.1 dex
Age ~4×106 years
Other designations
V4647 Sgr, qF 134, 2MASS J17461524-2850035
Database references
SIMBAD data

The Pistol Star is a blue hypergiant star, one of the most luminous known in the Milky Way. It is one of many massive young stars in the Quintuplet cluster in the Galactic Center region. The star owes its name to the shape of the Pistol Nebula, which it illuminates. It is located approximately 25,000 light years from Earth in the direction of Sagittarius. It would be visible to the naked eye as a fourth magnitude star if it were not for the interstellar dust that completely hides it from view in visible light.

The Pistol Star was discovered using the Hubble Space Telescope in the early 1990s by Don Figer, an astronomer of UCLA.

The star is thought to have ejected almost 10 solar masses of material in giant outbursts perhaps 4,000 to 6,000 years ago (as observed from Earth). Its stellar wind is over 10 billion times stronger than the Sun's. Its exact age and future are not known, but it is expected to end in a brilliant supernova or hypernova in 1 to 3 million years. The mass is equally uncertain, thought to have been over 100 times the Sun when initially formed but now considerably less due to extreme mass loss. Modelling the star itself to match its spectrum gives a mass of 27.5 M, while matching its current properties to an evolutionary model gives a much higher mass (86-92 M).

Early reports suggested that it might be the most luminous star known, being almost 10 million times as luminous as the Sun. Later studies, however, have reduced its estimated luminosity, making it a candidate luminous blue variable about one-third as luminous as the binary star system Eta Carinae. Even so, it radiates about as much energy in 20 seconds as the Sun does in a year.


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