Large Magellanic Cloud

Fabulous Stars

Can there be anything more incredible than being able to resolve hordes of fabulous stars in another galaxy, never mind some of the most extreme stars ever seen?

Extreme Stars

It’s no surprise that the truly extreme stars all inhabit the Cloud’s most extreme piece of real estate… the ferocious 30 Doradus complex. These stars, the hottest, most massive, and most extreme stars known, are reminiscent of the early universe. The LMC’s proximity and clear global view makes it the only example of a starburst (an extremely intense and rapid episode of star formation) that astronomers can study in detail, making it the Rosetta Stone that can help provide astronomers with the key for understanding our universe’s history.

Being able to delve into this incredible region and observe some of these extreme stars among the hordes of stars inhabiting 30 Doradus is dumbfounding.

Another extreme star, red supergiant WOH G64, resides far from 30 Doradus; it lives in supergiant shell LMC 6. The star earned its place in history in October 2024 when a team of astronomers published an image of it… the first detailed interferometric image of an RSG outside the Milky Way. It is an extremely large star 1540 times the size of the Sun – easily the largest in the LMC! Unfortunately, this highly massive and luminous star is extremely faint at mag 17-7-18.8. You can read a fascinating write-up about this extreme star here

Scrollable Table

Location: LMC = Supergiant Shell

Extreme Stars

Star
Name
RA
Dec
Mag
Region
Location
Extremely massive red supergiant
WOH G64
04 55 10.5
-68 20 30
17.7-18.8
Northwest
LMC 6
Runaway star
VFTS 16
05 37 08.8
-69 07 20
13.5
Southeast
30 Doradus
Runaway & fastest rotating massive star
VFTS 102
05 37 39.2
-69 09 51
15.8
Southeast
30 Doradus
Extremely massive walkaway star
VFTS 682
05 38 55.5
-69 04 26
16.0
Southeast
30 Doradus
Extreme overcontact binary
VFTS 352
05 38 28.4
-69 11 19
14.5
Southeast
30 Doradus
Most massive binary known
Melnick 34
05 38 44.2
-69 06 06
13.0
Southeast
30 Doradus
High-mass X-ray binary hosting a neutron star
VFTS 399
05 38 33.4
-69 11 59
15.8
Southeast
30 Doradus

Luminous Blue Variables

S Doradus is arguably the most fabulous star we can observe in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Not only is it the brightest star in the Cloud (visual magnitude 8.6 to 11.7), and one of the brightest known stars (absolute magnitude -9), but it is the prototype for one of the rarest types of star known – luminous blue variables (also called S Doradus stars). It lies in the OB Association LH 41 = NGC 1910 which is located on the northern rim of the central bar of the Cloud, and contains a number of other extremely bright stars.

S Doradus is a blue supergiant with a spectrum very similar to that of P Cygni, another variable of the same type. These stars are extremely massive (at least 60 solar masses) and luminous, and they use up their nuclear fuel so fast that their lifetimes can’t exceed a few million years before they explode as supernovae, and they are therefore extremely rare. The very high luminosity also results in an enormous radiation pressure at the star’s surface, which tends to blow away significant portions of the stellar mass by way of an intense stellar wind and, occasionally, in the form of an ejected gaseous shell. According to Burnham, the light curve of S Doradus also points to a long period (40-year) eclipsing variable behaviour.

And for the science fiction aficionados, in 1952 A. E. van Vogt marooned a pair of young lovers on a planet around S Doradus! Their rescuers commented on the star thus, “This star-type is so immensely hot that practically all of its energy radiation is in the far ultravisible. The normal radiation of that appalling star-type – the aeon-in-aeon-out rate – is about equal to a full-fledged Nova at its catastrophic maximum of violence. Nova O, we call that brightest of all stars; and there is only one in the Greater Magellanic Cloud, the great and glorious S Doradus.” It is indeed a great and glorious star.

 

S Doradus is a stellar wonder that steals the local show. Credit: ESO, Hubble

Scrollable Table

Confirmed LBVs from: The contribution by luminous blue variable stars to the dust content of the Magellanic Clouds; C. Agliozzo et al (2021)

Location: LH = LH OB Associations. LMC = Supergiant Shell. N = Henize Nebula.

Luminous Blue Variables

Name
HD
RA
Dec
Mag
LH
Region
Location
S Doradus
HD 35343
05 18 14.3
-69 15 01
10.25
LH 41
Bar
N119
LHA 120-S 83
HD 269582
05 27 52.6
-68 59 08
-
-
Northeast
LMC 3
R71
HD 269006
05 02 07.3
-71 20 13
10.55
-
Southwest
Central Chart
R85
HD 269321
05 17 56.0
-69 16 03
10.84
LH 41
Bar
N119
R110
HD 269662
05 30 51.4
-69 02 58
10.28
-
Northeast
LMC 3
R116
HD 269700
05 31 52.2
-68 32 38
10.54
LH 71
Northeast
LMC 3
R127
HD 269858
05 36 43.6
-69 29 47
10.15
LH 96
Southeast
LH 96
R143
HD 269926
05 38 47.5
-69 00 25
13.1
-
Southeast
30 Doradus
LHA 120-S 88
HD 269216
05 13 30.7
-69 32 23
11.1
LH 39
Bar
Chart 5

Classical Cepheid Variables

The two Magellanic Clouds’ Classical Cepheids (also known as δ Cephei stars or type I Cepheids) have a huge place in the history of astronomy, and no exploration of the LMC would be complete without observing at least one of them. And fortuitously, one is exceptionally well-placed for an observation, being just north of bright and beautiful Theta Doradus!

In 1912, Henrietta Swan Leavitt, working as one of the famous computers at Harvard College Observatory, made a discovery that was to become one of the cornerstones of modern astronomical science. She was studying photographic plates of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds and compiled a list of 1,777 periodic variables. She classified 47 of these in the two Clouds as Cepheid variables and noticed that those with longer periods were brighter than the shorter-period ones. She correctly inferred that as the stars were in the same distant Clouds, they were all at much the same relative distance from us. Any difference in apparent magnitude was therefore related to a difference in absolute magnitude. When she plotted her results for the two Clouds, she noted that they formed distinct relationships between brightness and period. She chose 25 variable stars from the Small Magellanic Cloud and in 1912 she published a diagram of this relation. Her plot showed what is now known as the period-luminosity relationship. The discovery of this simple and hitherto-unknown relationship made it possible, for the first time, to calculate their distance from Earth. Henrietta Leavitt had just become, in the words of George Johnson, author of the book Miss Leavitt’s Stars, ‘the woman who discovered how to measure the Universe’. Nowadays, the two Magellanic Clouds are also important targets for studying Classical Cepheids stars because both galaxies contain the largest known collection of these stars among all stellar environments, including the Milky Way.

 

Henrietta Swan Leavitt: the woman who discovered how to measure the Universe. Popular Astronomy, v. 30, no. 4, April 1922

Scrollable Table

Classical Cepheids (delta Cep type)

Name
Alias
RA
Dec
Spectral Type
Mag
Region
Location
R83
SV* HV 2369
05 13 53.6
-67 03 48
F5
12.2
Northwest
Central Chart
SV* HV 5761
-
05 20 23.0
-69 02 17
-
13.3
Bar
Chart 3

Variable Stars

For the variable star aficionado, the LMC is the place to be. Volume 5 of the General Catalogue of Variable Stars (5th edition) lists 4,802 known variables in the Large Magellanic Cloud – a number expected to increase enormously in the aftermath of the MACHO Project.

In February 1987, AAVSO member, Albert Jones in Nelson, New Zealand turned his telescope to look at the three variable stars he was studying in the LMC. There in the same viewing field was a very bright blue star that did not belong! Jones got his star charts out and noted the position of the new star relative to other stars. Clouds rolled in before he could determine a magnitude estimate, so he alerted other observers to his find. Later the clouds broke, and Jones was able to estimate a magnitude of 5.1. Not knowing if other observers were clouded out, he continued observing the supernova for another 4 hours. His perseverance provided critical early coverage of Supernova 1987A!

Two cool Sanduleak stars

Nicholas Sanduleak (1933-1990) was an American astronomer who published a catalogue of stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (1970) which included the progenitor of the Cloud’s famous 1987 supernova… blue supergiant Sk -69 202. He has a star in the Cloud named after him; it’s a peculiar symbiotic star that produces the largest stellar jet known thus far. Alas for being a very faint mag 17.0… a big Dobs star. 

 

Sk -69 202 became the coolest star in the LMC when it blew itself to smithereens in 1987 and gave us SN1987A. Credit: ESO

Scrollable Table

Two cool Sanduleak stars

Star
RA
Dec
Mag
Region
Location
Sk -69 202 = SN1987A
05 13 53.6
-67 03 48
12.2
Southeast
30 Doradus
Sanduleak’s Star
05 45 19.5
-71 16 06
17.1
Southeast
Central Chart

Ionising Stars

There it something incredibly fascinating about looking at a star that is a massive, short-lived blue star emitting copious amounts of high-energy ultraviolet photons and ionising a significant part of a huge cloud of gas! Where possible with the Henize nebulae, I have included the ionising stars on the annotated images.

Double Stars

In our own galaxy, double stars offer both charm and challenge. Like snowflakes, no two double-star systems are alike, and many pairs display beautiful contrasting colours and/or magnitude contrasts, while others are so close together that splitting them is a great visual test of one’s optics and of the night’s seeing conditions.

The Cloud’s double stars also offer charm and challenge. Albeit we have no chance of seeing the shimmering yellow and vivid blue colours of a LMC Albireo, the fact that we can split double stars and see magnitude contrasts in a binary star system 163,000 light years away in another galaxy makes the dazzling colour contrast a moot point.

Scrollable Table

Double Stars

Name
RA
Dec
Mag 1
Mag 2
Sep"
PA°
Region
Location
HJ 3710
04 53 31.9
-66 55 27
10.7
12.9
11.6
83
Northwest
N4
HD 32987
05 02 23.0
-64 54 17
9.4
10.2
39.4
180
Northwest
Central Chart
HJ 3746
05 10 12.8
-72 04 36
8.0
8.2
3.9
267
Southwest
Central Chart
HJ 3747
05 13 38.9
-67 34 31
9.1
10.8
7.8
107
Northwest
N30
B 2098
05 15 50.4
-72 05 03
9.2
11.3
3.0
170
Southwest
Central Chart
RST 132
05 21 42.8
-65 44 56
11.1
11.4
0.9
211
Northwest
LH 45
HJ 3838
06 05 24.7
-64 59 48
11.0
11.0
?
307
Northeast
Chart 3
HJ 3862
06 21 14.5
-67 34 59
9.5
11.4
7.8
290
Northeast
Chart 3
HEI 658
05 26 50.8
-71 16 28
10.1
10.5
1.9
101
Southwest
LMC 9
HRG 135
05 29 12.8
-66 36 52
9.5
9.5
1.8
23
Northeast
LMC 4
HJ 3783
05 30 45.8
-70 55 08
8.3
10.6
15.3
260
Southwest
LMC 9
HJ 3790
05 34 55.8
-66 53 55
10.5
14.0
10.4
154
Northeast
Quadrant
HJ 3820
05 51 00.6
-69 54 09
7.6
10.4
26.8
83
Southeast
Central Chart
HJ 3844AB
06 07 50.6
-69 41 09
8.8
12.2
13.3
93
Southeast
Chart 1
HJ 3844AC
06 07 55.2
-69 41 33
8.8
11.3
33.9
136
Southeast
Chart 1

Wolf-Rayet Stars

Wolf-Rayet stars are an exotic class of very rare stars. They stars represent the most advanced evolutionary stage in the lives of luminous massive stars. And for very massive stars, mass loss dominates their evolution and Wolf-Rayet stars shed mass rapidly by means of very powerful stellar winds up to 10 million kilometres per hour (6 million miles per hour), causing them to dwindle at a rapid rate. Their mass is being blown away at a rate of 10 solar masses every million years, which means the equivalent of three Earths’ worth of material each year is blown away from the star at a speed that is about 3,500 times as fast as a bullet fired from a rifle.

Due to the extreme mass loss, WR stars are basically stripped-down versions of highly evolved massive stars. The exposed core equals between 10 and 20 solar masses and are extremely hot with surface temperatures between 25,000 and 60,000 K, and in extreme cases even as high as 90,000 K. They are extremely luminous, their luminosities ranging between about 100,000 and a million times that of the Sun, at the limit close to that of luminous blue variables.  (Luminosity is a measure of the total amount of energy radiated by a star or other celestial object per second… the power output of a star.)

Wolf-Rayet stars’ spectra show strong, broad emission lines. This implies copious amounts of ionized helium, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen in their rapidly expanding envelopes. As such, Wolf-Rayet stars are divided into 3 classes based on their spectra, the WN stars (nitrogen dominant, some carbon), WC stars (carbon dominant, no nitrogen), and the rare WO stars with C/O < 1. WO stars are believed to be Wolf-Rayet stars that have evolved past the WC stage.

As a result of their high fuel-burning rate and their rapid shedding of outer material, Wolf-Rayet stars are incredibly short-lived, lasting around a million years or even as little as just a few 100,000 years, which makes them incredibly rare stars. The fate of Wolf-Rayet stars, like that of all massive stars, is to explode as supernovae. These spectacular stars perfectly exemplify the endless cycle of stellar life and death that has molded the development of galaxies over billions of years… who can’t be dumbfounded at the sight of them in another galaxy?

 

In all this swirling nebulosity, Wolf-Rayet Brey 40a has blown a bubble around itself, and one can observe the visible fragments of its ring as ethereal and dagger-thin streaks to the south and west of the lovely mag 13.4 star. Credit: Y. Naze, G. Rauw, J. Manfroid, J. Vreux (Univ. Liege), Y. Chu (Univ. Illinois), ESO

Scrollable Table

From the Fourth Catalogue of Population I Wolf-Rayet Stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud – J. Breysacher, M. Azzopardi, and G. Testor (1999)

Location: LH = LH OB Associations. LMC = Supergiant Shell. N = Henize Nebula. SB = Superbubble.

Wolf-Rayet Stars

BAT99
Brey
HD/HDE
RA
Dec
Mag
Spectral Type
LH
N
Region
Location
2
2
04 49 36.2
-69 20 54
16.2
WN
77
Southwest
N79
4
3a
04 53 29.9
-69 17 48
WC+O8
82
Southwest
N79
6
5
04 55 14.8
-67 11 23
12.2
WN
6
9
Northwest
Central Chart
8
8
32257
04 56 02.7
-69 27 20
15.1
WC
8?
Southwest
LH 8
9
7
32125
04 56 11.1
-66 17 32
15.1
WC
11
Northwest
SB N11
10
9
32228
04 56 34.6
-66 28 26
14.4
WC
9
11
Northwest
SB N11
11
10
32402
04 57 24.1
-68 23 57
12.7
WC
12
91
Northwest
N91
13
04 57 41.0
-66 32 41
12.9
WN
11
Northwest
SB N11
15
12
268847
04 59 51.6
-67 56 53
14.8
WN
16A
Northwest
Central Chart
19
16
34169
05 09 40.4
-68 53 24
13.8
WN+OB?
31
105A
Bar
SB N105
20
16a
05 09 53.8
-68 52 51
14.2
WC+O
31
105A
Bar
SB N105
21
17
34632
05 13 43.6
-67 22 29
13.1
WN+OB
37
30
Northwest
N30
22
18
269227
05 13 54.4
-69 31 46
12.1
WN
39
Bar
Chart 5
25
19a
05 14 57.2
-71 36 19
15.8
WN
Bar
SB N105
27
21
269333
05 18 19.2
-69 11 40
11.3
WN+B1
41
119
Bar
N119
28
22
05 19 16.4
-69 39 19
12.2
WC
42
120
Bar
N120
29
23
05 20 44.7
-65 28 20
14.6
WN
43
Northwest
LMC 5
30
24
05 21 57.5
-65 48 59
13.4
WN
45
Northwest
LMC 5
31
25
05 22 04.3
-67 59 06
15.5
WN
47?
44C
Northwest
SB N44
32
26
36063
05 22 22.5
-71 35 57
12.7
WN
198
Southwest
LMC 9
33
269445
05 22 59.7
-68 01 46
11.5
O/WN9
49
44L
Northwest
SB N44
34
28
36156
05 23 10.0
-71 20 50
12.9
WC+OB
50
200
Southwest
LMC 9
36
29
269485
05 24 23.9
-68 31 35
14.8
WN/WCE
138
Northwest
N138
38
31
36402
05 26 04.0
-67 29 56
11.5
WC+O8
54
51D
Northeast
LMC 4: Sextant
39
32
36521
05 26 30.3
-68 50 25
12.5
WC+O6
58
144
Northeast
SB N144
40
33
05 26 36.8
-68 50 59
15.0
WN+O
58
144
Northeast
SB N144
42
34
269546
05 26 45.2
-68 49 51
9.91
WN+B3
58
144
Northeast
SB N144
43
37
05 27 37.7
-70 36 05
14.2
WN+OB
62
204
Southwest
LMC 9
45
269582
05 27 52.6
-68 59 07
12.8
WN
61
Northeast
LMC 3
47
39
269618
05 29 12.4
-68 45 35
14.1
WN
64?
Northeast
LMC 3
49
40a
05 29 33.0
-70 59 35
13.4
WN+O6
13.4
206
Southeast
SB N206
53
44
37248
05 30 38.6
-71 01 47
13.4
WC+O9
69
206
Southeast
SB N206
56
46
269692
05 31 32.9
-67 40 46
14.7
WN
57A
Northeast
SB N57A
58
47
05 32 07.5
-68 26 30
15.1
WN
148
Northeast
LMC 3: N148
59
48
269748
05 33 10.0
-67 42 43
13.2
WN+O8
57C
Southeast
LMC 2
61
50
37680
05 34 19.1
-69 45 09
14.1
WC
81
154
Southeast
SB N154
62
51
05 34 37.4
-66 14 37
15.0
WN
62
Northeast
LMC 4
63
52
05 34 52.1
-67 21 28
14.6
WN4
56
Northeast
LMC 4
64
53
05 34 59.3
-69 44 05
14.4
WN+OB?
81
154
Southeast
SB N154
65
55
05 35 15.2
-69 05 42
15.1
WN
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
67
56
05 35 42.2
-69 12 33
13.9
WN+OB
90
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
68
58
05 35 42.2
-69 11 54
14.4
WN
90
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
69
58a
05 35 42.2
-69 11 52
17.7
WC
90
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
70
62
269818
05 35 43.5
-69 10 57
14.6
WC
90?
157
Southeast
SB 30 Dor C
71
60
05 35 44.3
-68 59 36
15.1
WN
89
157
Northeast
LH 89
72
61
05 35 45.0
-68 58 44
15.4
WN4+OB
89
157
Northeast
LH 89
73
63
05 35 50.7
-68 53 38
14.9
WN
85
157
Southeast
LMC 2
74
63a
05 35 52.5
-68 55 08
15.5
WN
89
157
Northeast
LH 89
75
59
269848
05 35 54.0
-67 02 48
14.3
WN
90
157C
Southeast
SB 30 Dor C
76
64
05 35 54.4
-68 59 07
13.5
WN
89
157
Northeast
LH 89
77
65
269828
05 35 58.9
-69 11 47
13.3
WN
90
157C
Southeast
30 Doradus
78
65b
05 35 59.1
-69 11 50
13.1
WN
90
157C
Southeast
30 Doradus
79
57
05 35 59.8
-69 11 21
13.6
WN+OB
90
157
Southeast
SB 30 Dor C
80
65c
05 35 59.9
-69 11 50
13.2
O4/WN
90
157C
Southeast
30 Doradus
81
65a
05 36 12.1
-67 34 57
15.4
WN
88?
59
Southeast
30 Doradus
82
66
05 36 33.6
-69 09 16
16.1
WN
157
Southeast
SB 30 Dor C
84
68
38030
05 36 51.4
-69 25 56
12.9
WC
Southeast
LH 96
87
70
05 37 29.1
-69 20 46
14.1
WC+OB?
97
Southeast
LH 96
88
70a
05 37 35.6
-69 08 39
17.6
WN
99
157B
Southeast
30 Doradus
89
71
269883
05 37 40.5
-69 07 57
14.2
WN
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
90
74
269888
05 37 44.6
-69 14 25
15.6
WC
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
91
73
05 37 46.3
-69 09 09
13.9
WN
99
157B
Southeast
N157B
92
72
269891
05 37 49.0
-69 05 07
11.5
WN+B1
157
Southeast
30 Doradus
93
74a
05 37 51.3
-69 09 46
13.8
O3/WN6
99
157B
Southeast
N157B
94
85
269908
05 38 27.6
-69 29 57
14.7
WN
101
158
Southeast
SB N158
100
75
(R134)
05 38 40.6
-69 05 57
12.8
WN
100
157
Southeast
Tarantula
101
87
(R140)
05 38 41.5
-69 05 13
12.9
WN+WC
100
157
Southeast
Tarantula
117
88
05 38 47.6
-69 00 25
12.9
WN+B
100
157
Southeast
Tarantula
118
89
05 38 53.4
-69 02 00
11.1
WN
100
157
Southeast
Tarantula
119
90
05 38 57.1
-69 06 05
12.2
WN
100
157
Southeast
Tarantula
120
91
269927c
05 38 58.0
-69 29 18
12.6
WN
101
158C
Southeast
SB N158
124
93a
05 39 36.2
-69 39 10
15.4
WN
103
160D
Southeast
SB N160
125
94
38448
05 39 56.2
-69 24 24
13.4
WC+O7
104
158
Southeast
SB N158
126
95
38472
05 40 07.6
-69 24 31
13.3
WN+O7
104
158
Southeast
SB N158
127
95a
05 40 13.5
-69 24 02
13.3
WC+O6
104
158
Southeast
SB N158
128
96
05 40 50.8
-69 26 31
15.0
WN
106
158
Southeast
SB N158
131
98
05 44 53.7
-67 10 35
14.5
WN
116
74
Northeast
N74
133
05 45 51.9
-67 14 25
11.9
WN
74
Northeast
N74
134
100
270149
05 46 46.3
-67 09 58
14.5
WN
74
Northeast
N74

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