About 6.14934346 × 1018 metres
Betelgeuse is about 640 light-years from the sun.
well my reason is that the betelgeuse must be very large , because they said that the betelgeuse is located far from earth .
well my reason is that the betelgeuse must be very large , because they said that the betelgeuse is located far from earth .
Betelgeuse is a red supergiant in the constellation Orion. It is approximately 640 light years from us.
We haven't sent any spacecraft to Betelgeuse, it is much too far. However, the Hubble Space Telescope has studied Betelgeuse, so I guess that counts.
Betelgeuse is about 640 light-years from the sun.
No, Betelgeuse is too far away to have any effect on the sun.
well my reason is that the betelgeuse must be very large , because they said that the betelgeuse is located far from earth .
well my reason is that the betelgeuse must be very large , because they said that the betelgeuse is located far from earth .
Betelgeuse is a red supergiant in the constellation Orion. It is approximately 640 light years from us.
We haven't sent any spacecraft to Betelgeuse, it is much too far. However, the Hubble Space Telescope has studied Betelgeuse, so I guess that counts.
Betelgeuse is one of the larger stars, while Barnard's star is just a little red dwarf star. So, yes- Betelgeuse is far larger than Barnard's.
No. Some time in the next million years Betelgeuse will explode as a supernova, but it is too far away from us to damage the earth. All we will see is Betelgeuse getting a lot brighter in the night sky.
It is the brightest type of star, Red Supergiant.
Betelgeuse doesn't revolve around the sun. It is a star, even larger than the sun, and much too far away for the sun to have much effect on it.
See related question for Betelgeuse - Orion's right shoulder
betelgeuse