 Let's take a look at some of the Milky Way objects photographed by Hubble this past year. Here we're zooming in to a glittering open star cluster that contains a collection of some of the brightest stars seen in our Milky Way galaxy. Called Trumpler-14, it is located 8,000 light years away in the Corina Nebula. Because the cluster is only 500,000 years old, it has one of the brightest concentrations of massive luminous stars in the entire Milky Way. These blue-white stars are burning their hydrogen fuel so ferociously that they will explode as supernova in just a few million years. The combination of outflowing stellar winds and ultimately supernova blast waves will carve out caverns in nearby clouds of gas and dust. These fireworks will kick-start the beginning of a new generation of stars in an ongoing cycle of star birth and death.