
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Antares is one of the more impressive stars in the galaxy. It’s about a dozen times more massive than the Sun, 700 times wider, and almost a hundred thousand times brighter. Yet it has some brothers and sisters that are even heavier. They don’t look as impressive right now, but they will before long.
Antares is the orange heart of Scorpius. It stands just a whisker from the crescent Moon at dawn tomorrow. It’s flanked by two of those impressive siblings. Tau Scorpii is close below Antares, with Sigma Scorpii above it.
All three systems were born in a region known as Upper Scorpius. Over the past 12 million years or so, it’s given birth to thousands of stars. And quite a few of them are big and heavy.
Tau Scorpii, for example, is more massive than Antares. It’s not nearly as bright, though, because it’s millions of years younger. Antares has gone through a series of changes that have caused it to puff up to become a supergiant. Tau hasn’t reached that stage of life. But it will in the next couple of million years or so. When it does, it’ll shine even brighter than Antares does today.
Sigma Scorpii is a system of at least four stars — one of which is about 18 times the Sun’s mass. So when it puffs up, it’ll be even brighter than Tau.
Antares, Tau, and Sigma all face the same fate. Each star will explode as a supernova — blasting itself to bits and briefly shining as brightly as billions of Suns.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
4.6
247247 ratings
Antares is one of the more impressive stars in the galaxy. It’s about a dozen times more massive than the Sun, 700 times wider, and almost a hundred thousand times brighter. Yet it has some brothers and sisters that are even heavier. They don’t look as impressive right now, but they will before long.
Antares is the orange heart of Scorpius. It stands just a whisker from the crescent Moon at dawn tomorrow. It’s flanked by two of those impressive siblings. Tau Scorpii is close below Antares, with Sigma Scorpii above it.
All three systems were born in a region known as Upper Scorpius. Over the past 12 million years or so, it’s given birth to thousands of stars. And quite a few of them are big and heavy.
Tau Scorpii, for example, is more massive than Antares. It’s not nearly as bright, though, because it’s millions of years younger. Antares has gone through a series of changes that have caused it to puff up to become a supergiant. Tau hasn’t reached that stage of life. But it will in the next couple of million years or so. When it does, it’ll shine even brighter than Antares does today.
Sigma Scorpii is a system of at least four stars — one of which is about 18 times the Sun’s mass. So when it puffs up, it’ll be even brighter than Tau.
Antares, Tau, and Sigma all face the same fate. Each star will explode as a supernova — blasting itself to bits and briefly shining as brightly as billions of Suns.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
6,097 Listeners
938 Listeners
1,190 Listeners
1,340 Listeners
807 Listeners
43,909 Listeners
2,865 Listeners
336 Listeners
14,102 Listeners
540 Listeners
221 Listeners
318 Listeners
1,128 Listeners
135 Listeners
49 Listeners