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Westerlund 1

Westerlund 1
Surprise Cloud Around Vast Star.jpg

Credit: ESO/VPHAS+ Survey/N. Wright
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
Constellation Ara
Right ascension 16h 47m 04.0s
Declination −45° 51′ 04.9″
Distance 12.1±2.0 (3.7±0.6 kpc)
Physical characteristics
Mass 63,000 M
Radius 3.26
Estimated age 3.50 Myr
Other designations Ara Cluster, Westerlund 1, ESO 277-12, C 1644-457, VDBH 197
See also: Open cluster, List of open clusters

Westerlund 1 (also called Ara Cluster, designated Wd1) is a compact young super star cluster in the Milky Way galaxy, about 3.5–5 kpc away from Earth. It is one of the most massive young star clusters in the Milky Way, and was discovered by Bengt Westerlund in 1961 but remained largely unstudied for many years due to high interstellar absorption in its direction. In the future, it will probably evolve into a globular cluster.

The cluster contains a large number of rare, evolved, high-mass stars, including: 6 yellow hypergiants, 4 red supergiants including Westerlund 1-26, one of the largest known stars, 24 Wolf-Rayet stars, a luminous blue variable, many OB supergiants, and an unusual supergiant sgB[e] star which has been proposed to be the remnant of a recent stellar merger. In addition, X-ray observations have revealed the presence of the anomalous X-ray pulsar CXO J164710.2-455216, a slow rotating neutron star that must have formed from a high-mass progenitor star. Westerlund 1 is believed to have formed in a single burst of star formation, implying the constituent stars have similar ages and compositions.

Aside from hosting some of the most massive and least-understood stars in our galaxy, Westerlund 1 is useful as a relatively nearby, easy to observe super star cluster that can help astronomers determine what occurs within extragalactic super star clusters.


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