- It’s worth noting that when scientists talk about how it’s “about to go” supernova, they are saying within the next 10,000 to 100,000 years at the very least. - Dr Becky covered that paper in her video, where the new paper was suggesting within several decades to a hundred or so years. However that is also all based on simulations from observations. - I was going to recommend her recent video that covered the subject. A great explanation of exactly what happens to the fusion process in a star as it runs out of fuel, and what scientists are looking for to signal those changes. 
- Link to that video for those interested: https://youtu.be/3QgLwpuDGhI 
- I so hope we see this in in the next 30 - 50 years. Would so amazing and informative. Obviously, hoping it doesn’t hurt though. :D 
 
- !RemindMe 
- It’s possible it already did. Takes a while for a us to see it - Over 600 years, but that’s still miniscule compared to the lifetime of the star. 
 
 
- I hope that’s true! We’re about at the perfect distance from Betelgeuse; far enough away that it won’t hurt us, but close enough to get a great fireworks show! - I’m not sure about not hurting part. Yes, it will not cause a full on extinction, but extra night brightness will indeed kill some nocturnal species. Even caretta carettas might go extinct due to their newborns rely on stars for finding the sea. 
- Plus we don’t have very solid data for super novas considering how rare they are on a human time scale, we have never had this good of instruments to observe such a huge event so closely and precisely. - I really hope I live to see this super nova! 
 
- Would be very cool, I read the study and I don’t think their science is off but also I’m not an astrophysicist and the study has yet to be peer reviewed. 






