| Hubble shows stars have weight limit By Chris Kridler, Florida Today Stars appear to have a weight limit, a Hubble 
            Space Telescope study shows. Stars seem to max out at about 150 times the 
            mass of our sun. Astronomer Don Figer of the Space Telescope Science 
            Institute in Baltimore examined a cluster of stars in our own Milky 
            Way galaxy to make the conclusion. Massive clusters previously were thought to 
            have massive stars, but Figer's study found a cutoff point. The 
            finding was published in today's issue of Nature. It's still not clear why big stars have a 
            weight constraint, but they're spectacular, said astrophysics expert 
            Stanford Woosley of the University of California at Santa Cruz. 
            "They live short, extravagant lives and go out with a big bang," he 
            said. Mass isn't the same as size; a light star 
            sometimes is larger than a dense, small one. If one of these massive stars was at the center 
            of our solar system, it would appear 25 times as big as the sun and 
            very, very bright, Woosley said. "The Earth would boil and be 
            vaporized," he said. 
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