Betelguese getting some attention for dimming

Betelguese getting some attention for dimming

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Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Tuesday 14th January 2020
quotequote all
Just nosing at the observation data in the link from my first post an it is still dimming. Past the mid 80's low.
https://www.aavso.org/LCGv2/

Law of sod says it will pop back up I suppose. I expect the attention it is getting may be skewing the results.

funkyrobot

18,789 posts

228 months

Tuesday 14th January 2020
quotequote all
Come on. Let's have a firework display. smile

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Tuesday 14th January 2020
quotequote all
funkyrobot said:
Come on. Let's have a firework display. smile
At least it can wait til summer.

Eric Mc

122,013 posts

265 months

Tuesday 14th January 2020
quotequote all
I won't be hanging around waiting for something spectacular to happen.

Halmyre

11,193 posts

139 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Zirconia said:
Just nosing at the observation data in the link from my first post an it is still dimming. Past the mid 80's low.
https://www.aavso.org/LCGv2/

Law of sod says it will pop back up I suppose. I expect the attention it is getting may be skewing the results.
Eh? Not enough photons to go round? hehe

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Halmyre said:
Eh? Not enough photons to go round? hehe
Reply went awol. If it doubles up, I am in a time loop. Will need saving....


I am looking at the reports, there are quite a few different methods of capture including the Mk1. As more eyes are turned to this there are more results, I don't know how accurate the more results are. It is something on my roundtoit list to better understand but certainly I can see where you are on the Earth can affect the result, I don't understand how they factor in their uncertainty error yet. Back to my roundtoit.

Hoofy

76,352 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
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Noob q: how do you pronounce Betelguese?

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
I say it the way you must say it three times.

Though Ford may have something to say on it.

Hoofy

76,352 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Zirconia said:
I say it the way you must say it three times.

Though Ford may have something to say on it.
Oh. It's the "gu" bit that I wasn't sure about.

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Hoofy said:
Zirconia said:
I say it the way you must say it three times.

Though Ford may have something to say on it.
Oh. It's the "gu" bit that I wasn't sure about.
That should be "must not" from me. To get that pesky ghost appearing. Which is probably wrong.


When you hear the peeps on Sky at Night etc. Betle then guse or something.

Eric Mc

122,013 posts

265 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
You can pronounce is as it is in the film or you can give it a more "French" style.

Back in 1979, an oil tanker called the Betelgeuse exploded at anchor at the Whiddy Island oil depot down in Cork. That ship's name was always referred to in the French style - but it was a French ship.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whiddy_Island_disast...

Hoofy

76,352 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
thumbup

So, "top left reddish star in the Orion constellation!" biggrin

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Call it the famous one. The others in the constellation are.....
Erm,
ah,
give me a minute, must have read it somewhere

(scuttles off to software....)

Hoofy

76,352 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Zirconia said:
Call it the famous one. The others in the constellation are.....
Erm,
ah,
give me a minute, must have read it somewhere

(scuttles off to software....)
biggrin

Isn't the belt supposed to be interesting (when you have a Hubble)?

Zirconia

Original Poster:

36,010 posts

284 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Be nice to get some time at the eye piece. Weather ain't helping.

Don't want it top pop after June either (for a few months).

ElectricSoup

8,202 posts

151 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
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Are there any planets around Betelguese?

funkyrobot

18,789 posts

228 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
ash73 said:
There's bound to be life somewhere nearby in the kill zone.

Probably nothing, but...

https://earthsky.org/space/ligo-gravitational-wave...
Interesting. smile

Eric Mc

122,013 posts

265 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Hoofy said:
Zirconia said:
Call it the famous one. The others in the constellation are.....
Erm,
ah,
give me a minute, must have read it somewhere

(scuttles off to software....)
biggrin

Isn't the belt supposed to be interesting (when you have a Hubble)?
The other significant star in Orion is Rigel, which is in the bottom right hand corner. Rigel is a Blue Giant.

Orion probably has more interesting astronomical objects packed into it than any other constellation. Apart from Betelgeuse and Rigel, there is the Belt and Sword opf Orion, which is an area of vast gas and dust field and which is now know to be a stellar nursery where new stars are being born.

Although the images obtained by Hubble have been stunning, terrestrial telescopes can deliver some great pictures too, even amateur ones -






Hoofy

76,352 posts

282 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
Blimey. That is good. I imagined that would be from Hubble!

Scabutz

7,601 posts

80 months

Wednesday 15th January 2020
quotequote all
I cant believe we are talking about a star on the shoulder of Orion and no one has mentioned attack ships on fire yet.

Seriously thought I saw this news on Twitter this morning. I also got excited like someone above until i saw it might be 100,000 years away, also it may have already happened - blows my mind to think I could have happened back when we were fighting the French at Agincourt but the light hasn't reached us yet. I went out to have a look earlier. I always look for Orion on a clear night, must be one of the most recognisable constellations there is. Does seem to me that it looks dimmer, but perhaps that is just confirmation bias.