Betelgeuse and the Crab Nebula Reveal Stellar Death and Rebirth in Multi-Telescope Views

Betelgeuse and the Crab Nebula show how stars die, explode, and enrich the universe with heavy elements.

Advertisement
Written by Gadgets 360 Staff | Updated: 21 December 2025 19:34 IST
Highlights
  • Crab Nebula reveals gas from ancient supernova explosion
  • Betelgeuse shows late-stage evolution of a massive star
  • Stellar death spreads elements, triggering new star formation

The Crab Nebula composite shows expanding gas filaments from a supernova across multiple wavelengths.

Photo Credit: NASA

The red supergiant in Orion, Betelgeuse, raised questions with its unprecedented dimming late last year over when it might explode as a supernova. Astronomers don't know for sure when that event will happen, but they can look very far into the future by studying an exploded star called the Crab Nebula, documented in 1054. The profuse, spindly gas clouds of the Crab Nebula that are seen in a composite image combining five telescopes at radio, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, and X-ray wavelengths demonstrate how dying stars spray heavy elements like iron, passing on increased richness to space and giving birth to new stars.

Crab Nebula and Betelgeuse Reveal How Massive Stars End and Enrich the Cosmos

According to a NASA report, the Crab Nebula image is constructed from the data of the Very Large Array, Spitzer, Hubble, XMM-Newton, and Chandra observatories. Observations have revealed not only a spinning neutron star and filaments formed in the supernova explosion, but also show that 642 light-years away, the impending supernova Betelgeuse can be used to study massive stellar evolution.
By analyzing stars like Betelgeuse and the Crab Nebula, it becomes clear how supernovae spread elements, as well as filaments that trigger new star formations.

Advertisement

Betelgeuse and Crab Nebula Offer Insights into Stellar Life Cycles and Cosmic Evolution

Betelgeuse and the Crab Nebula are a natural laboratory for investigating the life cycle of stars and designing models of massive star evolution.

This multi-telescope view underscores the power of combining information from across the electromagnetic spectrum to piece together the full story of stellar death and rebirth, from surface changes to explosive remnants expanding across space.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Betelgeuse, Crab Nebula, supernova
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Prime Video Announces Farzi Season 2: All You Need to Know About This Show
  2. OnePlus 15T Roundup: Here's Everything That We Know So Far
  1. The Taj Story Out on OTT: Know Where to Watch This Intense Courtroom Drama Online
  2. Kepler-51 Super-Puff Planets Baffle Scientists as JWST Finds No Atmosphere Clues
  3. Sangamarmar Out on OTT: Know Everything About This Romance Drama Series Online
  4. Yogi Da OTT Release: Where to Watch Sai Dhanshika’s Action Thriller Online
  5. Prime Video Announces Farzi Season 2: All You Need to Know About This Show
  6. Samathi Sakatham Now Available for Streaming Online: What You Need to Know
  7. NASA Astronauts Complete 7-Hour Spacewalk to Prepare ISS Power System Upgrade
  8. Samsung Reportedly Plans to Introduce AirDrop Support on Galaxy S26 Series Later This Year
  9. Vivo Y21 5G, Vivo Y11 5G Price in India and Colourways Leaked a Month After Global Launch
  10. Toaster OTT Release: When and Where to Watch Rajkummar Rao’s Comedy Thriller
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.