Betelgeuse is a star, not a planet, so it does not have any satellites. Satellites, also known as moons, typically orbit planets, not stars.
No planet could ever come close to the size of Betelgeuse.
No. Betelgeuse is in Orion.
Betelgeuse is brighter.
No. Betelgeuse is a single star.
have any robots or satellites ever landed on pluto
No, Betelgeuse is too far away to have any effect on the sun.
No planet could ever come close to the size of Betelgeuse.
Mercury & Venus have no natural satellites.
Mercury has no satellites.
Mercury and Venus do not have any natural satellites.
Venus is one of the few planets that doesn't have any satellites orbiting around it. Venus also is a planet with no moons.
Venus does not have any natural satellites.
You probably mean to ask about natural satellites as opposed to artificial satellites. In terms of neutrality, all satellites are neutral. In any event, the planet Jupiter has the most natural satellites, of any planet in our solar system. The planet Earth has the most artificial satellites.
No
The position of Betelgeuse in the sky is a function of the date and your location. I recommend the open-source planetarium program "Stellarium", which will tell you, for any location and date you specify, the location of any star or planet in the sky.
Mercury and Venus have no natural satellites.
No, the name Betelgeuse comes from Arabic.