Earth could be getting a second sun, at least temporarily.
Dr. Brad Carter, Senior Lecturer of Physics at the University of Southern Queensland, outlined the scenario to news.com.au. Betelgeuse, one of the night sky's brightest stars, is losing mass, indicating it is collapsing. It could run out of fuel and go super-nova at any time.
When that happens, for at least a few weeks, we'd see a second sun, Carter says. There may also be no night during that timeframe.
Read more: Two Suns? Twin Stars Could Be Visible From Earth By 2012
Holy ****. This second sun is the things the Mayans predicted that will end the world.
Oh come on, Tatooine had a second son and everything was just dandy...
Actuallly Tatooine had only one son, the daughter went somewhere else. But I do agree that the planet had two SUNS.
Damn you sir... :2razz:
Tell you what you get me a girl that looks like Leia did when she was Jabba's slave on Tatooine and all will be forgiven.
Tell you what you get me a girl that looks like Leia did when she was Jabba's slave on Tatooine and all will be forgiven.
Do you think if I could find a girl like that... I'd hand her over to you :2razz:
No, give her to me, give her to me :2razz:
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) is one of the largest stars observed. It is indeed in the last stages of its existence, but it has been thus for a very very long time.
Lol. Relax folks. It will not implode in 2012 nor anytime soon.
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) is one of the largest stars observed. It is indeed in the last stages of its existence, but it has been thus for a very very long time.
Lol. Relax folks. It will not implode in 2012 nor anytime soon.
Someone needs to put the earth on birth control.
But to know this is false, just look at the OP "Dr. Brad Carter, Senior Lecturer of Physics at the University of Southern Queensland".
Fist of all, the bloke's currently underwater, so he wouldn't know, and secondly, didn't any of you learn anything from Monty Python.
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) is one of the largest stars observed. It is indeed in the last stages of its existence, but it has been thus for a very very long time.
Lol. Relax folks. It will not implode in 2012 nor anytime soon.
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) is one of the largest stars observed. It is indeed in the last stages of its existence, but it has been thus for a very very long time.
Lol. Relax folks. It will not implode in 2012 nor anytime soon.
Heck, if Betelgeuse went Nova this very second, we wouldn't be seeing it for several hundred years.
Betelgeuse (Alpha Orionis) is one of the largest stars observed. It is indeed in the last stages of its existence, but it has been thus for a very very long time.
Lol. Relax folks. It will not implode in 2012 nor anytime soon.
Either that, or it's one HELL of a supernova...that coupled with the fact that Betelgeuse is around 640 light years away make it improbable that it's anything we need worry about. if it went supernova today, we wouldn't know about it for another 640 years. If it has laready gone supernova, we may or may not see it and there is absolutely nothing we could do about it anyway.
any "experts" know what kind, if any, damage a star going supernova 640 light years away would do to us? seems to me that would be like someone in the US worrying about a guy in china setting off a stick of TNT.
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