Perfection
The Great Head.
Nope, Neptune is the smallest of the gas giants (by volume).greekguy said:uhhh, isn't Neptune bigger than Saturn?
Edit: Drats! Beaten to the punch!
Nope, Neptune is the smallest of the gas giants (by volume).greekguy said:uhhh, isn't Neptune bigger than Saturn?
The Sun is actually larger than most stars. The giants that vastly outsize it are a tiny proportion of all stars (but a large proportion of the stars you see in the night sky, because they are fantastically bright, and can be seen across much larger distances than smaller stars).Fallen Angel Lord said:Isn't the sun an average size star in terms of stars?
NOt supernovae , but Red Giants. That's what our Sun will do, it will swell up so large that it engulfs the four inner planets (that's us), and then shrink down to a white dwarf. NO spectacular ending for our star.MamboJoel said:Liberal propaganda...
Proportions are good.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planet
The big stars are supernovas.
It's part of the life cycle of a star (the end of it).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova
Dawgphood001 said:Gotta love feeling tiny.
Antares is definetly Gods' bowling ball of choice.
That's still a lot.Pontiuth Pilate said:Moreover to give you another idea of scale, all of Antares would fit in the space between the surface of the sun and Jupiter's orbit.
Nah, they're pretty compact in comparison. All in one neat package. (except of course the nebula of ejecta they spew out)North King said:Aren't Luminous Blue Variables bigger than Antares? Well, I'm certain they're much more massive, but what about volume-wise?
The Last Conformist said:According to WikiPedia, KY Cygni has a radius more than twice that of Antares, and more than ten times the volume.
It's one of a number of stars that seem to be at about the maximum size for red supergiants, the biggest kind of stars.Kan' Sharuminar said:Is that the largest star known?
Kan' Sharuminar said:Is that the largest star known?
The Last Conformist said:It's one of a number of stars that seem to be at about the maximum size for red supergiants, the biggest kind of stars.
Well, I suppose there's got to be a biggest known galaxy, a biggest known galactic cluster, a brightest known quasar, but I'm too lazy to look 'em up.Kan' Sharuminar said:Pretty neat.
What are the other 'biggest things in the universe' that we know of, out of interest?
The Last Conformist said:Well, I suppose there's got to be a biggest known galaxy, a biggest known galactic cluster, a brightest known quasar, but I'm too lazy to look 'em up.![]()