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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Supergiant star Betelgeuse may not be so giant after all

It may be another 100,000 years until the giant red star Betelgeuse dies in a fiery explosion, according to a new study by an international team of researchers.  

The study, led by Dr Meridith Joyce from The Australian National University (ANU), not only gives Betelgeuse a new lease on life, but shows it is both smaller and closer to Earth than previously thought. 

Dr Joyce says the supergiant โ€“ which is part of the Orion constellation โ€“ has long fascinated scientists. But lately, itโ€™s been behaving strangely. 

โ€œItโ€™s normally one of the brightest stars in the sky, but weโ€™ve observed two drops in the brightness of Betelgeuse since late 2019,โ€ Dr Joyce said. 

โ€œThis prompted speculation it could be about to explode. But our study offers a different explanation. 

โ€œWe know the first dimming event involved a dust cloud. We found the second smaller event was likely due to the pulsations of the star.โ€ 

The researchers were able to use hydrodynamic and seismic modelling to learn more about the physics driving these pulsations โ€“ and get a clearer idea of what phase of its life Betelgeuse is in. 

According to co-author Dr Shing-Chi Leung from The University of Tokyo, the analysis โ€œconfirmed that pressure waves โ€“ essentially, sound wavesโ€”were the cause of Betelgeuseโ€™s pulsation.โ€ 

โ€œItโ€™s burning helium in its core at the moment, which means itโ€™s nowhere near exploding,โ€ Dr Joyce said. 

โ€œWe could be looking at around 100,000 years before an explosion happens.โ€ 

Co-author Dr Lรกszlรณ Molnรกr from the Konkoly Observatoryโ€ฏin Budapest says the study also revealed how big Betelgeuse is, and its distance from Earth. 

โ€œThe actual physical size of Betelgeuse has been a bit of a mystery โ€“ earlier studies suggested it could be bigger than the orbit of Jupiter. Our results say Betelgeuse only extends out to two thirds of that, with a radius 750 times the radius of the sun,โ€ Dr Molnรกr said. 

โ€œOnce we had the physical size of the star, we were able to determine the distance from Earth. Our results show itโ€™s a mere 530 light years from us โ€“ 25 per cent closer than previous thought.โ€ 

The good news is Betelgeuse is still too far from Earth for the eventual explosion to have significant impact here. 

โ€œItโ€™s still a really big deal when a supernova goes off. And this is our closest candidate. It gives us a rare opportunity to study what happens to stars like this before they explode,โ€ Dr Joyce said. 

The study was funded by The Kavli Institute for the Physics and Mathematics of the Universe (WPI), The University of Tokyo, and facilitated by the ANU Distinguished Visitorโ€™s program. It involved researchers from the United States, Hungary, Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, as well as Australia and Japan. 

The study has been published inย The Astrophysical Journal.ย ย 

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