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  2. Red giant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_giant

    The ejection of the outer mass and the creation of a planetary nebula finally ends the red-giant phase of the star's evolution. [10] The red-giant phase typically lasts only around a billion years in total for a solar mass star, almost all of which is spent on the red-giant branch.

  3. VY Canis Majoris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VY_Canis_Majoris

    VY Canis Majoris (abbreviated to VY CMa) is an extreme oxygen-rich red hypergiant or red supergiant (O-rich RHG or RSG) and pulsating variable star 1.2 kiloparsecs (3,900 light-years) from the Solar System in the slightly southern constellation of Canis Major.

  4. Red supergiant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_supergiant

    Mira was historically thought to be a red supergiant star, but is now widely accepted to be an asymptotic giant branch star. [32] Some red supergiants are larger and more luminous, with radii exceeding over a thousand times that of the Sun. These are hence also referred to as red hypergiants: Mu Cephei; VV Cephei A; NML Cygni; S Persei; UY Scuti

  5. Canis Major - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canis_Major

    W Canis Majoris is a type of red giant known as a carbon star—a semiregular variable, it ranges between magnitudes 6.27 and 7.09 over a period of 160 days. [67] A cool star, it has a surface temperature of around 2,900 K and a radius 234 times that of the Sun, its distance estimated at 1,444–1,450 light-years from Earth. [68]

  6. List of largest stars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_stars

    This is the nearest red giant to the Earth, and the fourth brightest star in the night sky. Pollux (β Geminorum) 9.06 ± 0.03 [95] AD The nearest giant star to the Earth. Spica (α Virginis A) 7.47 ± 0.54 [101] One of the nearest supernova candidates and the sixteenth-brightest star in the night sky. Regulus (α Leonis A) 4.16 × 3.14 [102]

  7. Giant bubbles on the surface of a nearby star preview the ...

    www.aol.com/giant-bubbles-surface-star-glimpse...

    The images show the surface of the star R. Doradus, a red giant star 180 light-years away in the Dorado constellation. The star has a diameter about 350 times that of the sun, and it serves as a ...

  8. The red giant star Betelgeuse is closer than we thought ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/red-giant-star-betelgeuse-closer...

    This red giant star will, one day, explode as a supernova. Betelgeuse is one of the best-known stars in the night sky, as well as the easiest to find. New examinations of this behemoth star ...

  9. Red clump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_clump

    The red clump should not be confused with the "red bump" or red-giant-branch bump, which is a less noticeable clustering of giants partway along the red-giant branch, caused as stars ascending the red-giant branch temporarily decrease in luminosity because of internal convection. [10]