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4:30 PM
Celestial mechanics and variable stars before the telescope: from the meridian line of the Vatican obelisk (1586-1817), to the stars on Santa Maria degli Angeli meridian line (1702) in Rome.
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Costantino Sigismondi
(ICRA Sapienza and ICRANET Pescara)
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4:30 PM
Fall and raise of Betelegeuse
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Costantino Sigismondi
(ICRA Sapienza and ICRANET Pescara)
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4:35 PM
Visual observations of Betelgeuse near the solar conjunction
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Costantino Sigismondi
(ICRA Sapienza and ICRANET Pescara)
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4:35 PM
The hypergiants VY Canis Majoris, Eta Carinae, V766 Centauri and the red supergiants Betelgeuse, Antares and Aldebaran in the 2.5K SGQ AAVSO database
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Costantino Sigismondi
(ICRA Sapienza and ICRANET Pescara)
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4:35 PM
Betelgeuse as didactic introductory tool for stellar variabilty, airmass computation and spectral analysis
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Costantino Sigismondi
(ICRA Sapienza and ICRANET Pescara)
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4:45 PM
Photometry of Betelgeuse at daylight
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Otmar Nickel
(Bundesdeutsche Arbeitsgemeinschaft für Veränderliche Sterne)
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4:52 PM
The curious case of Betelgeuse
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Jacco van Loon
(Keele University)
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5:00 PM
The Formation History of Betelgeuse
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Alexey Bobrick
(Lund University)
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5:10 PM
The dust settles: Did Betelgeuse undergo a critical transition?
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Sandip George
(University Medical Center Groningen)
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5:25 PM
The Great Dimming of Betelgeuse as viewed by high-resolution spectra from the Stratosphere, and ground based TiO Photometry
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Graham Harper
(Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy, University of Colorado Boulder)
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5:45 PM
Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: New Mass and Distance Estimates for Betelgeuse through Combined Evolutionary, Asteroseismic, and Hydrodynamic Simulations with MESA
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Meridith Joyce
(Space Telescope Science Institute)
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6:20 PM
Betelgeuse: Twinkle, Twinkle Bright Red Star How We Wonder What You Are?
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Edward Guinan
(Villanova University)
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6:50 PM
The Mysterious Great Dimming of Betelgeuse
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Andrea Dupree
(Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian)