James Webb telescope’s ‘starlit mountaintop’ could be the observatory’s best image yet — Space photo of the week

QUICK FACTS

What it is: Pismis 24, a young star cluster

Where it is: 5,500 light-years away, in the constellation Scorpius

When it was shared: Sept. 4, 2025

A craggy mountain peak, a tower, perhaps even a finger — in this new celestial dreamscape from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), something seems to be pointing at a cluster of bright stars above, as if a stargazing session were going on deep in the Milky Way.

This is Pismis 24, a small open star cluster at the core of the Lobster Nebula in the constellation Scorpius. This vast region of interstellar gas and dust is one of the closest sites to the solar system where our galaxy’s most massive and extreme stars burn fast and die young.

The orange and brown craggy peaks are huge spires of gas and dust, the European Space Agency wrote in a description of the image. The tallest, in the center of the image, is 5.4 light-years from base to tip — as wide as about 200 solar systems placed side by side out to Neptune’s orbit. Erosion within these spires is caused by powerful stellar winds and ultraviolet radiation from the massive newborn stars in the star cluster above. It’s all part of the process — as the gas is eroded and compressed by young stars’ radiation, new stars are born within the spires.

The James Webb Space Telescope’s view of a young star cluster 5,500 light-years from the solar system. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI, A. Pagan (STScI))

It’s a self-sustaining nursery, but there’s nothing ordinary about the stars in Pismis 24, which are among the most massive known stars in the galaxy. The brightest star in the cluster, Pismis 24-1, was once thought to be a single star with a mass of 200 to 300 suns. That’s almost twice the generally accepted upper mass limit for stars.

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