
A wave of starbirth is sweeping through Scorpius and some nearby constellations. It started about 20 million years ago, and is continuing today. It’s triggered the birth of thousands of stars, including some of the most impressive in our part of the galaxy.
The complex is called the Scorpius-Centaurus association. It consists of three distinct regions that appear to be related. Giant clouds of gas and dust in one of those regions began collapsing tens of millions of years ago. That gave birth to the first stars in the association.
The most massive members of that group produced winds and radiation that squeezed the surrounding clouds. And some of those early stars exploded, creating shockwaves that compressed the clouds even more. That triggered the birth of many more stars.
Many stars in the association are extremely big, bright, and massive. They account for many of the bright lights that outline the scorpion, the centaur, and other constellations in the region. For every one of those stars, there are hundreds of less-massive stars.
From Earth, the most impressive member of the association is Antares, the heart of the scorpion, which is quite near the Moon tonight. Antares is more than a dozen times the mass of the Sun, and tens of thousands of times brighter. In the next million years it’s likely to explode as a supernova – perhaps triggering the birth of even more stars in this busy complex.
Script by Damond Benningfield