The largest star certainly belongs to the class of red supergiants,
though the difficulty of measuring precise sizes for most stars
means it is not possible to say for certain which is the largest.
These stars as a group have radii which are comparable with the
orbits of Jupiter or Saturn in the solar system - from 800 to 1,600
million kilometres, or between 1200 and 2400 times the size of
the Sun. A possible candidate for the largest star is Alpha
Herculis. Another very large red supergiant is Mu Cephei.
Red supergiants are stars in a late stage of evolution. When the
hydrogen fuelling the nuclear energy source at the star's centre
begins to run out, a stage in the interior changes that take place
causes the outer layers of the star to expand greatly. A red
supergiant consists of a huge envelope of very tenuous gas
around the central core of the star.
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