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This is a list of supernova candidates, or stars that are believed to soon become supernovae. ... Betelgeuse: 05 h 55 m 10.3 s +07° 24′ 25″ Orion ~400–500 [8 ...
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 suggest it is both smaller — and closer — than astronomers ...
Found in the constellation Orion, Betelgeuse is extremely bright, especially considering that it’s roughly 650 light-years from Earth (though, it does have a radius 1,000 times bigger than the Sun).
A number of close or well-known stars have been identified as possible core collapse supernova candidates: the high-mass blue stars Spica and Rigel, [240] the red supergiants Betelgeuse, Antares, and VV Cephei A; [241] [242] [243] the yellow hypergiant Rho Cassiopeiae; [244] the luminous blue variable Eta Carinae that has already produced a ...
To be a threat to Earth, a supernova would need to be no further than 25 light years from the Solar System. Betelgeuse is roughly 600 light years away, and so its supernova would not affect Earth. [140] In December 2011, NASA's Francis Reddy issued a press release debunking the possibility of a supernova occurring in 2012. [141]
As Betelgeuse burns through fuel in its core, it has swollen to massive proportions, becoming a red supergiant, the latter phase of giant stars. When the star explodes, the event could be briefly ...
However, the first dredge-up occurs soon after a star reaches the red supergiant phase and so this only means that Betelgeuse has been a red supergiant for at least a few thousand years. The best prediction is that Betelgeuse has already spent around 40,000 years as a red supergiant, [18] having left the main sequence perhaps one million years ago.
To answer your question without getting drawn into a discussion, yes, uncertainties in the lifetime remaining to Betelgeuse make it possible that the time to supernova as observed from Earth is less than its light-time distance, and so the explosion may have "already" happened. — BillC talk 08:21, 28 May 2024 (UTC)