• Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Terms of Use
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
NEW EXPRESS NEWS
  • HOME
  • US NEWS
  • INDIA
  • EUROPE
  • WORLD
  • GULF NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • RELIGIOUS
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • US NEWS
  • INDIA
  • EUROPE
  • WORLD
  • GULF NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • RELIGIOUS
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE
No Result
View All Result
NEW EXPRESS NEWS
No Result
View All Result

NASA telescope uncovers the cause of Betelgeuse’s mysterious dimming – CNET

by NEWS DESK
August 16, 2020
in TECHNOLOGY
0 0
0
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
ShareShareShareShareShare
a-plume-on-betelgeuse-artists-impression

Betelgeuse will go supernova and explode… eventually.

ESO

In the Before Times, when the coronavirus pandemic was only just beginning its grim march across the globe, our troubles were much farther away. About 640 light-years farther away, in fact. Astronomers observing Betelgeuse, a red supergiant star, had been puzzled by its mysterious dimming. Some believed the event, which lasted from November 2019 to February 2020, was a portent of doom signaling the star's upcoming explosion. Then the dimming abruptly stopped.

Thanks to observations by NASA's Hubble telescope, we might know why.

A new study, published in The Astrophysical Journal on Thursday (and accessible at arXiv), examined ultraviolet light emitted by Betelgeuse during the "Great Dimming" event using the Hubble Space Telescope. Fortunately, the event occurred just as Hubble scientists were looking to observe Betelgeuse with the telescope, providing a chance to understand why the star had begun to go dark.

CNET Science

From the cosmos to your inbox. Get the latest space stories from CNET every week.

Betelgeuse is a massive star, about 700 times bigger than our sun. If you dropped it into our solar system, it would swallow Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, the asteroid belt's various worlds whole and Jupiter would end up as a snack, too. And it's coming to the end of its life cycle, sometime in the next 100,000 years. When the supergiant started to dim last year, there were some believers who thought the process of exploding may have begun.

stsci-h-p2044a-f-3930x1748Enlarge Image

A NASA graphic showing how a dust cloud might obscure the view of Betelgeuse.

NASA/ESA/E. Wheatley (STScI)

The Hubble observations suggest differently. By looking at Betelgeuse at UV wavelengths, researchers were able to get a better look at the star's surface and atmosphere. They discovered a mass of bright, hot material moving outward from the southern hemisphere of the star at around 200,000 miles per hour and eventually being ejected into space.

"This material was two to four times more luminous than the star's normal brightness," said Andrea Dupree, associate director at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and lead author on the study, in a NASA release. About a month after the outburst, the south part of Betelgeuse dimmed conspicuously, she said.

Dupree and her team believe this material may have begun to cool down as it moved through space, forming a dense dust cloud that partially obscured Betelgeuse. It just so happens that Earth was in the perfect position to "see" the dust cloud front on, as if Betelgeuse shot the dust cloud directly at us. If it happened on the opposite side of Betelgeuse, we'd likely never even know.

Explosive outbursts are expected from star's at the end of their life and when they die or "go supernova," they release a shockwave that spews elements into space. The activity is critical to fill space with heavy elements like carbon, which then can become new stars elsewhere in the universe, so these stars are critical to the cosmic Circle of Life.

Betelgeuse is still acting a little weird, however. Observations by NASA's Stereo spacecraft observed the supergiant between late June and early August and noticed Betelgeuse was unexpectedly dimming again. NASA notes further observations will be undertaken in late August, when the star returns to the night sky and can be seen by telescopes again.

Comments NASA Notification on Notification off Sci-Tech

Previous Post

NASA powers up first Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, as it travels through space – CNET

Next Post

Coronavirus sickens Pinellas County sheriff in Florida

Related Posts

TECHNOLOGY

Meta security manager was reportedly hacked by Greek intelligence agency

March 21, 2023
0
TECHNOLOGY

Comedians are trying to make the metaverse cool, but it won’t let them

March 21, 2023
0
TECHNOLOGY

ChatGPT bug temporarily exposes AI chat histories to other users

March 21, 2023
0
TECHNOLOGY

Zack Snyder is making a Rebel Moon RPG that’s on a ‘ridiculous scale’

March 20, 2023
0
TECHNOLOGY

Marvel Studios VFX head Victoria Alonso is out

March 20, 2023
0
TECHNOLOGY

Google’s fixing the Pixel Watch’s tardy alarms

March 20, 2023
0
Next Post

Coronavirus sickens Pinellas County sheriff in Florida

Browse by Category

  • arts and entertainment
  • BUSINESS
  • EDUCATION
  • EUROPE
  • GULF NEWS
  • HEALTH
  • INDIA
  • LIFESTYLE
  • NEWS
  • RELIGIOUS
  • SCIENCE
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • Uncategorized
  • US NEWS
  • WORLD
NEW EXPRESS NEWS

Follow Us

  • MALAYALAM NEWS

© 2020 NEW EXPRESS NEWS

  • HOME
  • US NEWS
  • INDIA
  • EUROPE
  • WORLD
  • GULF NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • HEALTH
  • RELIGIOUS
  • SPORTS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • LIFESTYLE

© 2020 NEW EXPRESS NEWS

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In