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What is it?
Aldebaran is a in the constellation Taurus (Latin for "bull"). In many pictorial representations of the constellation, Aldebaran represents the “eye” of the bull.
Aldebaran has a mass to that of our Sun, but it is in radius.
Where did it come from?
Before Aldebaran reached its current stage, it was a Sun-like star, just a little bit more massive than our Sun. As a main-sequence star, it fused hydrogen in its core to helium, but the in its core ran out, and temporarily stopped.
Without hydrogen fusion, Aldebaran generating pressure to balance against the inward pull of gravity, causing gas to fall toward the core. This triggered a thin layer of gas just the star’s to hydrogen to helium.
This sudden burst of new energy pushed the of the star rapidly, causing Aldebaran to to many times its original size. The surface temperature , the color of the star.
What is happening now?
While the outer layers of the star were expanding, the core continued to under its own gravity. It eventually became hot and dense enough to begin to carbon (which requires a higher temperature and density than fusing hydrogen to helium). The energy released by prevents from compressing the star further, and it remains in for a while.