Woh G64: Astronomers Say the Giant Star May Be Near a Dramatic End

woh g64 has taken a dramatic turn, and astronomers say the massive star may be moving into a rare yellow hypergiant stage. The change was identified in research led by Gonzalo Muñoz-Sanchez at the National Observatory of Athens and published in Nature Astronomy on Tuesday ET. The star sits in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a …

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Woh G64: Astronomers Say the Giant Star May Be Near a Dramatic End

woh g64 has taken a dramatic turn, and astronomers say the massive star may be moving into a rare yellow hypergiant stage. The change was identified in research led by Gonzalo Muñoz-Sanchez at the National Observatory of Athens and published in Nature Astronomy on Tuesday ET. The star sits in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a neighboring dwarf galaxy, and the new findings suggest it may be edging closer to the final phase of its life.

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What changed in woh g64

The key shift appears to have happened in 2014, when woh g64 showed a major change in color and structure. Long-term monitoring had already shown the star behaving unusually, but the new study says the latest evidence points to a transition from a red supergiant into a rare yellow hypergiant.

That matters because the change may reflect a star shedding its outer layers while its core shrinks inward. In the study’s interpretation, that is the kind of unstable behavior that can come before a supernova. Astronomers have tracked woh g64 for decades, and the star’s unusual brightness cycle helped make the shift stand out.

WOH G64 was first identified in the 1970s as a star of interest in the Large Magellanic Cloud. It later became known as one of the largest ever discovered, with a radius more than 1, 500 times that of the Sun.

Why astronomers are watching so closely

A major clue came in 2024, when woh g64 became the first star beyond our galaxy ever photographed in detail with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. That image showed a thick dusty cocoon around the star, reinforcing the idea that it is losing mass as it ages.

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The research team says the 2014 change may have been caused by the ejection of a large part of the star’s surface. One possible explanation is interaction with a companion star, which the authors say they confirmed through the spectrum of light from woh g64. Another possibility is that the star is entering a pre-supernova “superwind” phase tied to strong internal pulsations as fuel in the core runs down.

Gonzalo Muñoz-Sanchez, the study’s lead author at the National Observatory of Athens, said the evidence points to a major transformation in the star’s outer layers. The team’s view is that the star may be showing the kind of rapid change that can come before a massive stellar death.

What this could mean next

WOH G64 is still a young star in cosmic terms, with an estimated age of less than 5 million years. But unlike the Sun, it is expected to live fast and die young, and stars of this size are understood to end in a supernova or, in some cases, collapse into a black hole with little visible display.

That is why astronomers are treating woh g64 as a rare real-time case study. The star’s continued fading and shifting appearance will be watched closely, because the next phase could clarify whether this is a genuine transition or a more complex masking effect. Either way, woh g64 is now one of the clearest examples of a giant star changing fast enough to keep researchers on alert, and the next observations may show whether it is truly nearing a dramatic end.

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Investigative news reporter specialising in local government, public policy, and social issues. Two-time Regional Press Award winner.