The size of Betelgeuse is variable (it pulsates); plus, there are different estimates. But its diameter is approximately 900 times that of our Sun, which in turn is roughly 100 times the diameter of Earth (actually 109, but the data don't justify a very exact calculation), so Betelgeuse has roughly 900 x 100 = 90,000 times the DIAMETER of Earth; the ratio of volumes is that same number, cubed, or (after some rounding) about 700,000,000,000,000 times as much.
Betelgeuse is about 1,180 times larger the Sun.
So as a rough approximation about 2,127,774,087,928,000 Earths could fit into Betelgeuse. That's 2 quadrillion.
About 262 trillion earths can fit inside Betelgeuse and if Earth were the size of a Golf ball, Betelgeuse would be the size of 6 empire state buildings.
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Betelgeuse is a supergiant star.
No, Betelgeuse is a red star.
Betelgeuse will be a Type II Supernova.
Betelgeuse has nothing to do with beetles or with juice.
No. Betelgeuse has 950-1200 times the diameter of the Sun.
Betelgeuse is about 1,180 times larger the Sun. So Betelgeuse is about 128,620 times bigger than Earth. So as a rough approximation about 2,127,774,087,928,000 Earths could fit into Betelgeuse. That's 2 quadrillion.
The word "Betelgeuse" has 3 syllables in it Be-tel-geuse.
Betelgeuse is 40,473,416.93376 AU' (Astronomical Units) from Earth.
Betelgeuse is approximately 600 light years from Earth.
No. Betelgeuse is quite large, but there are many stars even larger. See the related question for more info.
Well for shore the biggest star in our solar system is called "Betelgeuse" not many people know how hot Betelgeuse is!
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The radius of Betelgeuse is over 1000 times the radius of the sun, so the volume will be over a billion times. So, you could fit over a billion suns in Betelgeuse.
With a radius of over 1000 times our sun, the volume of Betelgeuse is over a billion times our sun. So, our sun could fit into Betelgeuse over a billion times.
No, Betelgeuse is about 640 light-years from earth, but some stars are many billions of light-years away.
Betelgeuse is around 10 times greater in diameter than Rigel.
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