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Published: 2019-11-14 18:51:55 +0000 UTC; Views: 7235; Favourites: 82; Downloads: 48
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Description
A curious size comparison of several giant stars, including the most luminous known star in the universe, R136a1, and various other interesting things, such as the total mass of all gold, platinum, lithium and lead in the Milky Way. Just a tiny snippet of what you can find in my new book, Vargic's Curious Cosmic Compendium, now available in stores !
www.amazon.co.uk/Vargics-Curio…
See Map of the Literature here!:
www.deviantart.com/jaysimons/a…
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Comments: 3
Ghidorah2344 [2022-08-01 15:08:02 +0000 UTC]
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anchorswaysdown In reply to Ghidorah2344 [2023-03-30 16:22:11 +0000 UTC]
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jclkay2 [2020-02-01 04:32:21 +0000 UTC]
Holy crap, I'm happy I found this. Your infographics never cease to amaze me. Did you make anything past these stars? Your work is so professional looking and it's clear you did a lot of research and put a lot of effort into this. Kudos to you.
Just some corrections about the classifications of the stars:
R136a1 is a Wolf-Rayet star, not a blue hypergiant.
Bellatrix is a blue giant, not a white supergiant.
Spica is a blue main sequence star, not a blue supergiant.
Gliese 229b is a brown dwarf, not an exoplanet.
Additionally, in an earlier slide, you misspelled Kepler 37b as Kepler 3b.
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