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‘Behemoth star,’ previously thought to be dying, is ‘rising from the ashes’ like a pheonix

One of the universe’s largest stars, previously predicted to be in the throes of a violent supernova death, may not imminently explode after all, a new study suggests. The surprise finding also hints that the stellar “behemoth” is slowly being cannibalized by a smaller, hidden partner.

WOH G64, often dubbed the “behemoth star,” is a red supergiant located around 163,000 light-years from Earth, in the Large Magellanic Cloud — a dwarf galaxy that closely orbits the Milky Way. The stellar giant is around 1,500 times wider than the sun, making it one of the largest stars ever discovered. It also shines up to 282,000 times brighter than our home star.

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