Came here to say this. From Betelgeuse. I left 650 years ago in the fastest ship I could afford at the time, a Hrundi four-berth runabout only capable of warp one. You stole my thunder.
Let’s just say the 649.9 years ago Betelgeuse went super nova… other than keeping all of us amateur astronomers up until she goes dim… what else can we do but wait.
Well, to answer your question.If beetlejuice exploded right now, we would know for another six hundred and seventy five years, and then it really wouldn't matter, because it's too far away to do anything
Right.....a spectacular light show indeed, but little else....possibly even being able to see ones own shadow on a moonless night. Of course, with Orion now minus his right shoulder, he will no longer be able take time away from his busy hunting schedule to run with the ball for his team in Galactic Starball!
So how much global warming would be caused if Betelgeuse goes supernova and night turns today? Would nights still cool off as much as they do now? Would daytime temperature soar due to the additive light / solar radiation?
Betelgeuse is 650 light years away so it could have already exploded and we wouldn't know for awhile
That possibility is so mind-boggling
It Exploded 650 years ago! If we see it now
Came here to say this.
From Betelgeuse. I left 650 years ago in the fastest ship I could afford at the time, a Hrundi four-berth runabout only capable of warp one. You stole my thunder.
If it explodes right now, we wouldn't notice it. Our great, great, great, great, great, great grandchildren would see it 640 years from now.
You need to add a substantially larger amount of more 'greats'.....(One for every 20 years...{32}....)
BHE
@@blackholeentry3489 😂😂😂
Let’s just say the 649.9 years ago Betelgeuse went super nova… other than keeping all of us amateur astronomers up until she goes dim… what else can we do but wait.
👁Betelgeuse Betelgeuse Betelgeuse👁
Well, to answer your question.If beetlejuice exploded right now, we would know for another six hundred and seventy five years, and then it really wouldn't matter, because it's too far away to do anything
Right.....a spectacular light show indeed, but little else....possibly even being able to see ones own shadow on a moonless night. Of course, with Orion now minus his right shoulder, he will no longer be able take time away from his busy hunting schedule to run with the ball for his team in Galactic Starball!
I hope the gravitational waves generated by the Beteljuice supernova do not cause the flat Earth to tip over!😲
If it exploded 'right now' we wouldn't know it for 15 generations.
If the star exploded right now, we wouldn't know until year 3000.
If Betelgeuse exploded "right now" it would be 640 years before we would see it.
What a fascinating and memorable experience that would be
650 ish...we don't have a 1st down marker over there
If it exploded right now we wouldn't know about it until until the year 2624
Another big bang far away - phil
If it exploded now we would find about it in 642.5 years because it's as many light years distant.
So how much global warming would be caused if Betelgeuse goes supernova and night turns today? Would nights still cool off as much as they do now? Would daytime temperature soar due to the additive light / solar radiation?
What does Beatle Juice taste like? Would it be the same as bug juice?
We are micro atoms here on earth…
Will let you know in a few million years
I don’t think it would be a good idea to look at the super nova without sun 😮ujjk;
❤❤❤