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Related: About this forumAstronomers watch Betelgeuse recover after colossal blast
Elisha Sauers - 9h ago
Just like the mischievous Tim Burton character of the same name, the red supergiant star Betelgeuse's head shrank.
Scientists watched the star blast its outer surface into space in 2019, an unexpected cosmic event they had never seen before in a normal star. The eruption was so catastrophic, it blew off 400 billion times as much material as the sun does routinely in ejections linked to solar flares, according to the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore.
What's more, the star got so dim, even backyard stargazers noticed. That left many people wondering if Betelgeuse [indeed pronounced "Beetlejuice"] was on the brink of an explosive stellar death.
It's not about to go supernova, experts say. But new observations from the Hubble Space Telescope are helping astronomers understand how red stars like Betelgeuse lose mass as they age and what consequences follow such a significant eruption. Because the scale of the blowout was vastly greater than the plasma that occasionally spews from the sun's corona, scientists suspect what happened to Betelgeuse might be a different sort of phenomenon.
More:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/astronomers-watch-betelgeuse-recover-after-colossal-blast/ar-AA10Cy7e
SCantiGOP
(14,238 posts)to have been in the 'neighborhood' when this occurred.
SWBTATTReg
(24,085 posts)visited by a star going nova. There are a couple of YouTube livestreams that are constantly monitoring potential candidates going nova.
Although the timeframes of a star going nova is sometimes in the thousands and perhaps 10,000 or more years, and I doubt that we'll be lucky enough to capture such a blast w/ the YouTube monitoring. It would be nice, but the chances are rather slim.
John1956PA
(3,368 posts)We are watching it as it appeared centuries ago.