Stars in a pinch
© NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI Image Processing: M. Garcia Marin, A. Pagan (STScI)
From a wider perspective, the Lobster Nebula indeed looks like an astronomically-sized arthropod claw, but a zoomed-up view of this space crustacean reveals complexity we've only begun to comprehend. The numberless twinkles in our image belong to newborn stars of the open cluster Pismis 24, a stellar nursery hosting some of the heaviest and highest-intensity stars we know of. Pismis 24-1, seen here at low center, is the most massive star in the cluster. Once considered the largest known star, it was later found to be multiple stars—each still dozens of times bigger and brighter than the sun.
No telescope required
Seeing double
The Sicilian Stonehenge
A celestial creepy-crawly
Of circles and stars
The aurora's aura
A state in space
Stone city stargazing