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View Full Version : Earth's sky will look like Tatooine!!


blah
01-20-2011, 05:50 PM
One of the world's biggest telescopes has captured a vast plume of gas and a mammoth boiling bubble on a red supergiant star set to explode in "the blink of an eye," astronomically speaking.

Betelgeuse has been around for a few million years, but the star's extreme size and luminosity mean the end is nigh, probably a few thousand years away.

The second-brightest star in the constellation of Orion, Betelgeuse is almost 1,000 times bigger than the sun. Astronomers say if Betelgeuse were at the centre of our solar system, it would encompass Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars and the main asteroid belt, almost reaching Jupiter's orbit.

A team of astronomers using the Very Large Telescope — which actually consists of four very large telescopes sitting side-by-side on a mountaintop in Chile — collected more than half a million images of the star in January.

Jan Cami, a professor at the University of Western Ontario in London, was a member of a team led by the Paris Observatory's Pierre Kervella, who travelled to Chile for two days of observations and got a good look at a gas plume almost as big as our solar system. They could also make out fainter traces that may be two additional plumes, Cami says.

As the Earth's atmosphere can cause distortion in the stellar images the telescope sees, the team deformed the telescope's mirror for brief periods of time, a technique called adaptive optics. To freeze the star's apparent motion, they also used a short exposure time and advanced image processing techniques.

Huge star gets its close-up

This is the first time astronomers have used this combination of techniques on the Betelgeuse star, Cami says.

Betelgeuse is so bright it can damage big telescopes, but the team blocked much of the star's light. They wanted to use the Very Large Telescope because it can show faint objects and fine detail with greater sharpness.

Another group led by Keiichi Ohnaka of the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, used a different viewing technique to map the movement of gas on the star's surface.

Ohnaka's group combined the light from the Very Large Telescope with that of a smaller telescope 48 metres away to produce a sharper image than would normally be possible.

"They obtained an image as sharp as what they would get with a 48-metre telescope," Cami said.

That team discovered a bubble of rising gas that corresponds to the location of the plume.

"It's absolutely spectacular," Cami says of the combined observations.

Betelgeuse expected to go supernova

Cami specializes in the chemical composition of material surrounding stars. He used the data from the telescope to identify elements in the plume.

"We know one of the chemical components is cyanide, which was surprising because we wouldn't have expected it."

The most important finding, though, is that the shape of the plume showed that Betelgeuse and supergiant stars like it are losing mass asymmetrically.

"It might help us understand how long it will take before the star explodes," Cami says.

Betelgeuse is a "textbook example" of a star that will soon become a supernova, and the new observations help astronomers as they try to understand what leads to the celestial explosions.

Cami said Betelgeuse will likely explode within thousands of years, an extremely short span of time by astronomical standards.

http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009/07/30/betelgeuse-dying-telescope-star.html


tl;dr In the next thousands of years, Betelgeuse will go SUPERNOVA and cause such a huge explosion, that it'll look like we will have two suns. Like Tatooine!!!


Thousands of years sounds.... Long, but in astronomical terms, it is one heck of a short span of time

nerVe
01-20-2011, 06:03 PM
I'll still be alive to see it.

black671
01-20-2011, 06:12 PM
Yeah the Earth's sky is gonna look like Tatooine. I guess the whole "the end is nigh, probably a few thousand years away" part breezed right past you during your nerdgasm. Nice find though.

armored cow
01-20-2011, 06:16 PM
What are you talking about?

black671
01-20-2011, 06:18 PM
We gon' die to death in thousands o' years, ho!

blah
01-20-2011, 06:24 PM
It could happen tomorrow, ho!

black671
01-20-2011, 06:37 PM
not even, bruh. that Betelgeuse be poppin' off in the future and shit

one of them
01-20-2011, 07:00 PM
I remember reading that there actually used to be a bright green star looking thing that was in the sky, but it went away a long time ago.

Deadly
01-20-2011, 07:01 PM
Silly people, it's already gone we're just only now seeing it.

Easton Dark
01-20-2011, 08:48 PM
Just go to Tunisia.

That's where they filmed it.

Bloodshed269
01-20-2011, 10:26 PM
not even, bruh. that Betelgeuse be poppin' off in the future and shit

I highly doubt it would reach Earth

lawlhat
01-20-2011, 10:51 PM
Silly people, it's already gone we're just only now seeing it.

Yeah. It's so far away that it probably died decades or centuries ago.

It's just going to take millenia for the light to get to Earth so that we can see it.

one of them
01-20-2011, 11:50 PM
If the universe is infinite then eventually won't the entire sky be flooded with light due to infinite star explosions?

Tyr
01-21-2011, 06:07 AM
I'm sorry but all I could see was "Beetlejuice". Wicked movie.

Paradox Viper
01-21-2011, 07:12 AM
If the universe is infinite then eventually won't the entire sky be flooded with light due to infinite star explosions?
Well there's that whole theory that space is infinite, but the universe expands then shrinks, then expands again. So the universe could simply be infinite in the sense that it keeps recreating itself.

Stuffinator
01-21-2011, 07:57 AM
Well there's that whole theory that space is infinite, but the universe expands then shrinks, then expands again. So the universe could simply be infinite in the sense that it keeps recreating itself.
like minecraft

Paradox Viper
01-21-2011, 09:20 PM
Yeah, God needs to seriously update his hardware if he's going to keep loading more and more chunks.

Blade
01-22-2011, 09:25 PM
Lol @ Stuff and Viper.

OT: I wish I could see it when it happens. That would be pretty awesome to see.

UnleashedBeast
02-02-2011, 06:07 PM
Betelgeuse is 427.5 light years away. When it does go Supernova, it would have happened 427.5 years before anyone ever knew about it.

The Chinese documented a Supernova in the year 1054. Another incident occurred in the 1970's. Both could be seen in daylight, as it was more radiant than the sun itself.

blah
02-02-2011, 09:53 PM
SCIENCE!

Yeah, but then again, that means we realized that the light from Betelgeuse is about to get brighter from a Supernova that might've happened years ago!