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There’s new evidence of a large cold spot partly causing dimming of Betelgeuse

Two images, the earlier one showing an orange sphere, and the second showing an orange sphere with much of one hemisphere partially eclipsed.

Enlarge / Astronomers continue to ponder the strange, dramatic dimming in the light from Betelgeuse, a bright red star in the Orion constellation, first observed in December 2019. (credit: ESO/M. Montargès et al. )

Back in June, we reported on a likely explanation for the strange, dramatic dimming of Betelgeuse , a bright red star in the Orion constellation: The star burped out a massive gas bubble, resulting in lower temperatures that condensed heavier elements into dust that temporarily obscured the starlight. Now, a team of Chinese scientists has found evidence of a large, dark, cooler spot on the star—consistent with those earlier findings—based on spectral analysis, according to a recent paper published in the journal Nature Communications.

As Ars’ John Timmer reported last year , Betelgeuse is one of the closest massive stars to Earth, about 700 light-years away. It’s an old star that has reached the stage where it glows a dull red and expands, with the hot core only having a tenuous gravitational grip on its outer layers. The celebrity has something akin to the heartbeat, albeit an extremely slow and irregular one. Over time, the star cycles through periods when its surface expands and then contracts.

Astronomers noticed the pronounced dimming of the light from Betelgeuse in December 2019; the difference was even visible in order to the naked eye. And the particular dimming persisted, decreasing in brightness by 35 percent in mid-February before brightening again in April 2020. Astronomers puzzled over typically the phenomenon and wondered whether it was a sign that this star was about to go supernova.

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