Acrux

Blue subgiant (multiple system) · Alpha Crucis
Brightest star in the Southern Cross; most southerly first-magnitude star

Acrux marks the foot of the Southern Cross and is the southernmost star of the first magnitude visible from Earth. What appears as a single point to the eye is actually a tight group of hot, massive blue stars.

Illustration generated from temperature, not a photograph

17.2 ☉
mass (the Sun = 1)
31 thousand ×
as bright as the Sun
28,950 K
surface · blue-white star
7 R☉
radius (the Sun = 1)
348 ly
from Earth
0.8
apparent magnitude

It pours out about 31 thousand times the Sun’s light. Its light has been travelling 348 years to reach us, so you see Acrux as it was 348 years ago.

Source · View on Wikidata

It lives in
Milky Way
Barred spiral galaxy.
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Other notable stars in Milky Way
Eta CarinaeLuminous blue variableAlnilamBlue supergiantVY Canis MajorisRed hypergiantAlnitakHot blue supergiantDenebBlue-white supergiantMintakaHot blue giant multiple star
Stars of similar brightness
HadarBlue giant32 thousand ×MimosaBlue giant26 thousand ×SpicaBlue giant (close binary)21 thousand ×BetelgeuseRed supergiant60 thousand ×SaiphBlue supergiant60 thousand ×HV 2112Red supergiant (Thorne-Zytkow candidate)63 thousand ×
Worlds in the same direction on the sky
← all notable stars