In 1997, astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope (HST))
identified a star that could claim the record. They dubbed it the
'Pistol Star' from the shape of the nebula surrounding it.
Though it releases up to 10 million times the power of the Sun,
it is not visible to the naked eye since it lies 25,000 light years
away, near the centre of the Milky Way, and is hidden by large
clouds of dust. HST detected its infrared radiation, which can
penetrate the dust. However, a problem with identifying truly
superluminous stars is determining whether candidates really
are single stars or close multiple systems.
Before the claim of the Pistol Star, Eta Carinae would have been
the most serious contender, with an estimated luminosity 4
million times the Sun's. Following an outburst in the mid-
nineteenth century when it became the second brightest star in
the sky, it has now dimmed because it is surrounded by a cloud
of ejected material, probably several times the Sun's mass.
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