Betelgeuse

Oct. 23, 2024

Recent research has unveiled a surprising discovery about Betelgeuse that, the star's enigmatic brightening and dimming patterns may be caused by an unseen companion star.

About Betelgeuse:

  • It is a red supergiant star that forms the left shoulder of the constellation of Orion.
  • It is one of the brightest stars in the night sky and one of the largest stars ever discovered.
  • The star is approximately 650 light-years from Earth.
  • The star is nearing the end of its life span, and when it dies, the resulting explosion will be bright enough to see during the day for weeks.
  • It is one of the largest known stars, measuring more than 700 million miles (1.2 billion kilometers) in diameter.
  • It is known for its periodic dimming and brightening up.
  • It exhibits two distinct pulsation patterns: a short-term cycle of about a year and a longer six-year cycle.
  • The researchers concluded that the longer cycle, known as a long secondary period, is likely caused by the Betelbuddy's (companion star) orbital motion through Betelgeuse's surrounding dust.

What is Red supergiant star?

  • A red giant forms after a star has run out of hydrogen fuel for nuclear fusion, and has begun the process of dying.
  • They are evolved stars with masses between 10 and 25 times that of the Sun.
  • A star classed as a supergiant may have a diameter several hundred times that of the Sun and a luminosity nearly 1,000,000 times as great.
  • Supergiants are tenuous stars, and their lifetimes are probably only a few million years, extremely short on the scale of stellar evolution.
  • These stars have cool extended atmospheres.