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-Typical black hole
-One-solar mass dwarf
-typical neutron star
-main sequence star of spectral type M5
-The Moon
-and finally Jupiter
Give it a shot

2007-03-19 14:39:48 · 5 answers · asked by Jason G 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

5 answers

A few clues: spectral order goes OBAFGKM. O stars are the largest (most massive), M stars are the smallest (least massive). Planets are smaller than M stars but larger than moons.

The Sun is a G star. Black holes are the result of stars more massive than the sun, and retain the majority of that mass in the black hole.

2007-03-19 14:44:20 · answer #1 · answered by eri 7 · 1 2

It would go: the moon, Jupiter, main sequence star of spectral type M5, one solar mass dwarf, typical neutron star and finally typical black hole.

2007-03-19 15:14:17 · answer #2 · answered by Twizard113 5 · 8 4

black hole
neutron star

either m5 star or solar mass dwarf...not sure which would have more mass though - the m5 would be larger, but cooler - meaning it could have less mass, but if it were WAY larger, it would have more mass. Proxima Centauri - with much less mass than our sun - is an M5 star.

jupiter
moon

2007-03-21 05:23:47 · answer #3 · answered by Searching 4 Answers 2 · 0 3

(smallest) moon
| jupiter
| m5 star
| 1 solar mass star
| neutron star
(Largest) black hole

2015-12-04 13:59:42 · answer #4 · answered by trizzo 1 · 0 0

Do NOT listen to Twizard113 everyone. Got it wrong when I used his answers

2013-11-08 09:47:09 · answer #5 · answered by Mickey Yoochun 2 · 4 0

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