Australian Sky & Telescope

The Great Dimming of Betelgeuse

BETELGEUSE HAS BECOME A STAR — a media star, that is. Never in modern times has so much public attention been paid to a distant sun that hasn’t exploded. Astronomers have been keenly interested in Orion’s alpha star for some time, but now it’s a subject for the newspapers.

Betelgeuse is a red supergiant (RSG), a swollen, puffy star nearing the end of its life. These gigantic stars produce an abundance of dust, seeding interstellar space with various atomic elements. We still don’t understand exactly how they disperse their chemical bounty. This is partly because red supergiants are so few, and so many of them are so far away. Betelgeuse, being nearby, is our backyard RSG laboratory.

But that’s not what brought Betelgeuse into the spotlight. Between October and December 2019, the star’s ruddy glow plummeted, then kept on fading. Popular speculation abounded that it was about to go supernova.

The “Great Dimming” electrified both amateur and professional astronomers. Members of the American Association of Variable Star Observers (AAVSO) have followed the star for decades, and professionals regularly refer to AAVSO’s data to add context to their own investigations. With such instruments as Hubble, ALMA and the Very Large Telescope (VLT) at their disposal, the pros can probe slivers of the Betelgeuse spectrum in exquisite detail. But for overall measures of brightness, they often depend on the modest tools of amateurs, whose instruments are not saturated by the star’s intense light.

I lead an AAVSO observer group that was in on a campaign called the Months Of Betelgeuse, coordinated by Andrea Dupree (Center. Together, the pros and amateurs saw the supergiant dim and recover, watching from vantage points on Earth and in space.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Sky & Telescope

Australian Sky & Telescope3 min read
Long Time Coming
EXPLORING THE SOLAR SYSTEM is a long game, with travel times measured in years. And the time from when we first propose a mission to when our spacecraft sits on the launch pad, ready to leave Earth or die trying, is often much longer still. In a way,
Australian Sky & Telescope2 min read
Seejubg Canals On Mars
WHEN I WAS 10 years old, nothing captured my imagination more than the canals of Mars and the magnificent (and rather tragic) story Percival Lowell told of a civilisation of intelligent beings having built them to stave off extinction on their dying
Australian Sky & Telescope6 min read
A Deep Dive Into NGC 6822
Edward Emerson Barnard is known today for a number of things. His photographic work is highly regarded, particularly his images published in 1927 in A Photographic Atlas of Selected Regions of the Milky Way. But he was also one of the most accomplish

Related Books & Audiobooks