The Betelgeuse Enigma: The Betelbuddy Hypothesis
Priya Hasan

TL;DR
This paper reports the first direct imaging confirmation of Betelgeuse's faint companion star, Betelbuddy, revealing its orbit and properties, and discusses implications for understanding Betelgeuse's recent dimming events and future observations.
Contribution
The study provides the first direct imaging detection of Betelgeuse's companion star, Betelbuddy, and analyzes its orbit and characteristics, advancing knowledge of Betelgeuse's stellar environment.
Findings
Confirmed Betelgeuse's companion star Betelbuddy with direct imaging.
Measured the companion's separation, position angle, and brightness.
Found the companion's properties align with dynamical predictions.
Abstract
In the past six years, Betelgeuse has been in the news and drawn significant public interest. Starting in October 2019, Betelgeuse underwent a striking dimming event, fading from magnitude 0.5 to 1.7 by mid February 2020 a threefold decrease in brightness This gave rise to a number of speculative debates that the star was on the verge of a supernova, a moment of eerie quiet before the cosmic outburst. In a previous article, the author discussed the most accepted explanation to the dimming caused by episodic mass loss that released large dust grains, which obscured Betelgeuse's light and made it appear fainter. This interpretation suggested that the dimming was not a precursor to a supernova, as Betelgeuse is likely still far from reaching that stage. On 21 July 2025, the existence of the companion star was confirmed with direct imaging, for the first time, by the alopeke instrument on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
