Dying Star Betelgeuse Keeps Its Cool ... and Astronomers Are Puzzled

Ðekel

The Living Force

From the article:

The bright, red star Betelgeuse, in the constellation Orion, has entered the twilight of its life. Like many stars of a similar size that reach the end of the road, Betelgeuse is slowly shedding its mortal coil — by ejecting much of its mass out into space.

This phase of star death is extremely common in the universe — in about 5 billion years, when the sun starts to die, it too will become a "red giant." It will shed much of its mass and swell to such an enormous size that it will engulf Mercury, Venus and Earth. But new observations of Betelgeuse show that scientists still can't explain what causes a red giant's massive expulsion of matter.

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Earlier this month, at the 227th meeting of the American Astronomical Society (AAS), Harper presented new observations of Betelgeuse that appear to further complicate the story of how these red giant and supergiant stars shed so much mass.

The findings show that the gas moving away from the star is much colder than expected, and so far, scientists can't come up with a mechanism that can eject so much mass from the star, but also generate so little heat. It's a problem of balancing energy in and energy out and right now the accounting doesn't add up.

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Heat is a common byproduct whenever energy is exchanged – consider how friction can make your hands warm when rubbed together, or how a computer heats up while it is on. When objects collide, they can also generate heat. The magnetic field theory of red supergiants predicted that the energy pushing the gas outward would also warm it up, but the observations showed that wasn't the case.

"The basic underlying physics was way off," Graham said. "If you're going to throw out and eject matter, you need to put energy in — and that energy is not heating the plasma at all."

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So what mechanism could put so much energy into the material but not heat it?

In addition to magnetic fields, the explanation could be shockwaves, or great releases of plasma ejected from inside the star. All of these things could add up to explain what scientists are observing.

These events that they are observing are at a distance of over 600 light years.

Still, interesting what's now being seen in the expanded present.

Another good possible addition for SOTT spotted on space.com right now is this:


Earth changes on the horizon I suspect..
 
Betelgeuse has been brightening for the last 2 months and is about to get back to its original levels of brightness... Scientists now believe the star itself didn't change it's brightness, rather it was something else around it that affected how we perceived it - they are speculating that this something is a very very large dust cloud.

Another observation that supports the idea the star never lost its brightness is that it's temperature didn't drop!

In any case, the star isn't going to go supernova anytime soon and the oddities observed earlier this year are reversing - it's now getting brighter each day



 
Betelgeuse is behaving strangely again

Betelgeuse, a red giant on the verge of death, continues to show unusual behavior. After the Great Blackout that occurred in late 2019 and early 2020, the star became unusually bright. It is currently the seventh brightest star in the sky, while it usually ranks tenth. This has led to speculation that Betelgeuse is preparing to explode in an exciting supernova.

However, scientists believe that it is too early to talk about this and probably this behavior is due to ongoing fluctuations after the Great Blackout of 2019, and the star will return to normal within a decade.

Betelgeuse is one of the most interesting stars in the sky. It is located at a distance of about 700 light-years from Earth and is a red giant in the last stage of its life. It is also an unusual star for a red giant because it was previously a monster - a blue-white O-type star, the most massive class of stars.

Betelgeuse has changed its spectral type because it has almost exhausted its hydrogen reserves. Now it burns helium into carbon and oxygen and has expanded to gigantic proportions: about 764 times the size of the Sun and about 16.5-19 times its mass.

Eventually, it will run out of fuel to burn, become a supernova, throw out its outer material, and its core will collapse into a neutron star.

Before the Great Blackout, Betelgeuse also had periodic brightness fluctuations. The longest of these cycles is about 5.9 years, and the other is 400 days. But it seems that the Great Blackout caused a change in these fluctuations.

A new paper prepared by astrophysicist Morgan McLeod from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics has shown that the 400-day cycle seems to have halved. This pulsation cycle is probably caused by expansion and contraction inside the star. According to simulations conducted by McLeod and his colleagues, the convective flow inside Betelgeuse could rise and become a material that separates from the star.
 
When I read about this I remenber this Session:

November 16, 1994

Q: (L) If the mother planet that the human race was seeded on originally, is burned up, or turned into a cinder, I would like to know how it burned up?

A: Star expanded.

Q: (L) Well, if the star expanded, it must have expanded recently, is that correct?

A: Time does not measure that way in that realm.

Q: (L) What realm is that?

A: Time/space warp.

Q: (L) What do you mean by a time/space warp?

A: Too complicated but you already have some understanding of concept.

Q: (L) So, the star expanded and the mother planet was turned into a cinder. If this was the case, it means that it must have turned into a cinder very close to the point, using time loosely, when human beings were created?

A: You can't even use it loosely.

Q: (L) Would you help me out here. I'm trying to figure out why, if that planet was turned into a cinder, why were human beings seeded there... what was the point in being brought into being on a planet that was very shortly to become a cinder... a crispy critter...

A: Okay. Now: "Shocker" For you. It hasn't become a cinder yet.
 
It's Official: Betelgeuse Has a Binary 'Twin', And It's Already Doomed

At least one mystery surrounding the red giant Betelgeuse can now be put to bed. Astronomers have finally laid eyes on a small, dim binary companion whipping around the massive sun.

The observations of this smaller, fainter star perfectly match predictions of its properties based on Betelgeuse's behavior. Given that the name Betelgeuse means 'Hand of the Giantess' in Arabic, a team of researchers proposes that the companion, circling this 'hand', be named Siwarha – 'Her Bracelet'.

It's a detection that astronomers thought might not be possible at all, making it a spectacular achievement.

"This detection was at the very extremes of what can be accomplished with Gemini in terms of high-angular resolution imaging, and it worked," says Steve Howell, an astrophysicist at NASA Ames Research Center. "This now opens the door for other observational pursuits of a similar nature."

Located at an uncertain but near distance of around 548 light-years away in the constellation of Orion, Betelgeuse is one of the biggest and brightest stars in Earth's sky. It's a bloated beast at the end of its lifespan, clocking in at a mass somewhere between 16.5 and 19 times our own Sun's mass yet a radius of around 764 times our own star's.

At a mere 10 million years old, the giant might seem quite young for a senior, especially given that there are stars out there nearly as old as the 13.8 billion-year age of the Universe. That's because Betelgeuse is massive. More massive stars burn much hotter, brighter, and faster than the smaller ones, ending their lives in spectacular supernova fireworks and the formation of a neutron star or black hole.

Betelgeuse, therefore, represents a rare jewel in the sparkling cosmos: a short-lived star in the fleeting last stage of its lifespan, close enough to Earth to observe in detail.

Those observations have certainly ponied up the goods, too: Betelgeuse is pretty weird. There was the mysterious great dimming, in which the star's luminosity dropped by a whopping 35 percent; an observation that was later traced to a huge ejection of dust that obscured the star's light as it cooled.

Betelgeuse's light fluctuates in other ways, too. It has two dominant periods of fluctuating brightness – one every 400 days, the other about six years. The 400-day period is its main one, caused by internal pulsations within the star itself.

The secondary, six-year period has been a little more difficult to resolve since it didn't fit internal activity.

Several recent papers, however, proposed that a small, close binary companion between around one and two times the mass of the Sun might be responsible, predicting that the best time to observe this object would be in December 2024.

This is where things get tricky. Because Betelgeuse is so large and bright, finding a smaller, dimmer object right next to it is not easy. Howell and his colleagues turned to a technique called speckle imaging: using very short bursts of exposure times to correct for the distortion effects of Earth's atmosphere.

The resulting detection only has a confidence level of 1.5 sigma, but it ticks all the boxes: a binary companion, right where astronomers thought it would be, at the time it should appear.

It's around 1.6 times the mass of the Sun, Howell and his colleagues believe, at an orbital separation of 4 astronomical units – about four times the distance between Earth and the Sun. That puts Siwarha closer to Betelgeuse than Jupiter is to the Sun, and results in an orbital period of 5.94 years.

"The results presented here are not definitive, as the detection is at the limit of the instrument capabilities," the researchers write in their paper. "However, the results do present the most direct and substantive evidence for the existence of a stellar companion to Betelgeuse, as well as the properties of that companion."

Boom. Mic drop.

The observations suggest that Siwarha is an F-type star that has not quite yet made it to the main sequence – it's not advanced enough yet for hydrogen fusion to ignite in its core.

Remember how more massive stars have shorter lifespans? Smaller ones take a little longer to get going. So, while Betelgeuse and Siwarha were probably born together, at the same time, the former's life is nearly over, while the latter's is yet to really start.

It probably won't ever start, actually. Astronomers predict that Betelgeuse is going to go supernova sometime within the next 100,000 years, likely leaving behind a neutron star. When it does so, Siwarha is right in the firing line.

The next opportunity to observe Siwarha will come around in November 2027. Astronomers have just two short years to hone their observation techniques to catch a better glimpse of this elusive, doomed star.

The research has been published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

 
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