WR 124 is 30 times the mass of our own Sun and has so far ejected 10 Suns’ worth of material into space.

By Iain Todd

Published: Wednesday, 15 March 2023 at 12:00 am


The James Webb Space Telescope has captured spectacular image of a Wolf-Rayet star, the final stage in a massive star’s life before it explodes as a supernova.

The star, known as WR 124, is located 15,000 lightyears away and can be found in the constellation Sagittarius.

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James Webb Space Telescope image of Wolf-Rayet star WR 124. Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Webb ERO Production Team

A Wolf-Rayet is a key stage in the evolution of massive stars.

These stars are going through the process of casting off their outer layers of cosmic dust and gas, which cools and produces a beautiful halo that glows in infrared in this new Webb Telescope image.

The Wolf-Rayet stage is rare and brief, making this detection by Webb a key discovery. It was one of the first observations made by JWST, back in June 2022.

WR 124 is 30 times the mass of our own Sun and has so far ejected 10 Suns’ worth of material into space.

Cosmic dust is a key component of the Universe, as it is out of dust that new stars and planetary systems are born.

It can even serve as a platform for molecules to clump together and form the building blocks for life.

But, say NASA, there appears to be more dust in the Universe than current dust-formation theories can explain.