HD 97950


HD 97950, is a multiple star system and part of a super star cluster within the NGC 3603 H II region. It was catalogued as a single star although it was always known to be a compact cluster. It is now resolved into a massive multiple star at the centre of one of the densest clusters in the galaxy.
Only the six lettered stars A-F at the core of the cluster are typically referred to as components of HD 97950, while the remaining stars of the cluster and surrounding area are usually numbered as members of NGC 3603. The cluster itself is still called the HD 97950 cluster as well as the NGC 3603 young cluster. There are no other notable groupings of stars in NGC 3603 and the HD 97950 cluster is often loosely referred to as simply NGC 3603.

Members

The main components are designated A1, A2, A3, B, and C, of which A1 and C are known to be spectroscopic binaries. A1a, A1b, and C are all WN6h Wolf–Rayet stars, amongst the most massive and luminous known.
There are several dozen early O class stars in the cluster, mostly main sequence stars. There are just a handful of giants and supergiants including: one prominent early B supergiant, Sher 25; a highly luminous O3.5 supergiant, Sher 18; and an interesting carbon-rich O9.7 supergiant, Sher 23.
Over 7,500 stars have been identified in the cluster, with the least massive being smaller than the sun and the most massive over. Stars less than about have not yet reached the main sequence.
Other namesSpectral typemVMVTemperature Luminosity
A1a30WR 43aWN6h11.18−7.842,0002,500,000
A1b30WR 43aWN6h11.18−7.840,0001,500,000
A231O3V12.53−6.946,500-
A326O3III13.09−6.446,500-
29O4V13.68−5.244,000-
27O4V13.07−5.844,000-
25O4V13.01−5.944,000-
B23WR 43bWN6h11.33−7.942,0002,900,000
40O3V13.33−5.746,500780,000
33O5V+OB?13.69−5.8-
41O4V14.24−5.144,000236,000
42O3III12.99−6.146,5001,030,000
37O6.5V+?14.16−5.0-
C18WR 43cWN6h11.89−7.344,0002,200,000
D49O4V12.64−6.344,000-
D50O5V12.74−6.241,000-
D52O4V13.68−5.244,000-
38O3V13.21−5.946,500540,000
E19O5.5III12.83−6.141,000-
F39O5V11.86−6.141,000-
16O3V13.53−5.446,500711,000
43O4V13.87−5.044,000-
14O4V13.88−5.044,000-
59O4V13.65−5.344,000-
60O4V13.60−5.344,000-
62O4V13.09−5.644,000-
58O5.5V13.09−5.139,500-
G61O5V12.74−6.041,000-
51O4V13.33−5.644,000-
9O4V13.71−5.244,000-
7O4V13.58−5.444,000-
22O5III13.23−5.841,000-
1Sher 23OC9.7Ia12.70−6.330,250449,000
2Sher 22O3III13.21−5.646,500863,000
5Sher 25B1Iab12.23−6.522,000649,000
48Sher 18O3.5If12.65−6.439,5001,790,000
24O4V12.72−6.244,000-
MTT 25O3V12.61−6.246,500-
20O4V13.9844,000-
17O4V14.1044,000-
45O8V-III14.14−4.733,750124,000
57O4V13.9844,000-
10O4V14.17−5.144,000258,000
MTT 58O2If*/WN614.76−5.7855,000
WR 42eO2If*/WN614.53−6.31,300,000

The number of WNh and early O stars exceeds any known cluster in the galaxy. The Quintuplet and Arches clusters each have around 20 young massive stars and may have masses comparable to the HD 97950 cluster, but they contain no O3 or WN6 stars at all. The rich red supergiant clusters such as Westerlund 1 are too old to contain such stars, although may be even more massive. R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud contains stars more massive than any in HD 97950, as well as large numbers of early O stars, and the cluster as a whole may be ten times as massive.
It has been proposed that the star WR 42e, found 2.6 arcmin from the centre of the cluster, and J1117−6120, an O6V runaway a quarter of a degree away on the other side of the cluster, were both ejected in a 3-body interaction. Two of the stars then merged to form the extremely massive and luminous WR 42e.

Mass

The HD 97950 cluster has a total photometric mass of, and a dynamical mass of. The constituent stars have apparently dynamical segregated with the more massive stars predominantly found at the centre of the cluster. The centre of the cluster has a density of pc−3, ten times the Orion Nebula and comparable to R136.

Age

Fitting the main sequence, and pre-main sequence gives a cluster age of 1 million years or less. There is no clear main sequence turnoff, although the most massive stars are modelled best with an age of 2.5 million years, but are compatible with an age around one million years. A small number of stars, for example Sher 25, apparently show much greater ages and it has been suggested that there is either ongoing star formation, or an earlier burst of star formation. Other studies have estimated ages up to 2 million years, but the existence of the most massive and luminous stars provide a hard upper limit of 2.5 million years on the possible age.
This is one of the youngest clusters in the galaxy. The Arches Cluster is around 2.5 million years old, the Quintuplet cluster nearly double that, and the various red supergiant clusters obviously even older. Even R136 is thought to be near to 2 million years old. Trumpler 14 in the Carina Nebula is thought to be as little as 300,000 - 500,000 years old, but is much less massive.