Star booted out of Milky Way

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Mike Rotch

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Harvard-Smithsonian center for astrophysics
First Stellar Outcast Discovered by Astronomers
Cambridge, MA--Using the MMT Observatory in Tucson, AZ, astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) are the first to report the discovery of a star leaving our galaxy, speeding along at over 1.5 million miles per hour. This incredible speed likely resulted from a close encounter with the Milky Way's central black hole, which flung the star outward like a stone from a slingshot. So strong was the event that the speedy star eventually will be lost altogether, traveling alone in the blackness of intergalactic space.

"We have never before seen a star moving fast enough to completely escape the confines of our galaxy," said co-discoverer Warren Brown (CfA). "We're tempted to call it the outcast star because it was forcefully tossed from its home."

The star, catalogued as SDSS J090745.0+24507, once had a companion star. However, a close pass by the supermassive black hole at the galaxy's center trapped the companion into orbit while the speedster was violently flung out. Astronomer Jack Hills proposed this scenario in 1998, and the discovery of the first expelled star seems to confirm it.

"Only the powerful gravity of a very massive black hole could propel a star with enough force to exit our galaxy," explained Brown.

While the star's speed offers one clue to its origin, its path offers another. By measuring its line-of-sight velocity, it suggests that the star is moving almost directly away from the galactic center. "It's like standing curbside watching a baseball fly out of the park," said Brown.

Its composition and age provide additional proof of the star's history. The fastest star contains many elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, which astronomers collectively call metals. "Because this is a metal-rich star, we believe that it recently came from a star-forming region like that in the galactic center," said Brown. Less than 80 million years were needed for the star to reach its current location, which is consistent with its estimated age.

The star is traveling twice as fast as galactic escape velocity, meaning that the Milky Way's gravity will not be able to hold onto it. Like a space probe launched from Earth, this star was launched from the galactic center onto a never-ending outward journey. It faces a lonely future as it leaves our galaxy, never to return.

Brown's co-authors on the paper announcing this find are Margaret J. Geller, Scott J. Kenyon and Michael J. Kurtz (Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory). This study will be published in an upcoming issue of The Astrophysical Journal

linky
 
Ha ha, that's so cool! It'd suck to be in that star's path though. Massive ball of fire flying through space…
 
If this star is massive enough, won't it take other small masses with it? After all, bodies to tend to gravitate towards one another, right?

Therefore, this "booted-out star" could concievably take mass away from our galaxy, or would the amount of mass that this quickly-moving star takes tend to form another smaller solar system or even another galaxy?

Whoa! I forgot how fascinating astrophysiscs is...even if you're technically clueless due to endless hypothesizing!
 
I doubt that there is anything small enough, close enough to get caught in it's field. Especially if it is moving at that speed. I suppose it might be possibe for objects to get a bit of a 'buffeting' in its 'wake'.l
 
pupik
If this star is massive enough, won't it take other small masses with it? After all, bodies to tend to gravitate towards one another, right?

Therefore, this "booted-out star" could concievably take mass away from our galaxy, or would the amount of mass that this quickly-moving star takes tend to form another smaller solar system or even another galaxy?

Whoa! I forgot how fascinating astrophysiscs is...even if you're technically clueless due to endless hypothesizing!

I read in the newpaper that it was heading out to intergalactic space where pretty much nothing exists. Whether it gets some asteriods tagging along is hard to imagine. I mean, it is travelling at 1.5 million mph, so anything it did come near probably would have time to get sucked along.

I think :confused:

edit: I just rehashed whay DQuan said :D
 
Imagine the fun if it collides with something on its way out the door!
 
In the words of the late Johnny Carson, "wild shtuff!" Good find, Mike!
 
I'm so disappointed... I was hoping you were referring to Eminem :yuck:

But seriously, it sounds incredible, but surely this sort of thing must happen pretty often, and we've just never observed it before? One more thing to keep you awake at night... the thought that a star may be hurtling towards us at 1.5 million miles per hour... now that would be a Deep Impact...

So long as it doesn't happen before I've had a chance to play GT4 for atleast a week :sly:
 
Touring Mars
So long as it doesn't happen before I've had a chance to play GT4 for atleast a week :sly:
Better come over to the US just to be safe. You never know when it could happen.
scared.gif
The sky is falling! The sky is falling!
 
Pretty Darn Cool!

Any chance we can evict Neptune from the solar system?
It really isn't pulling its weight.
 
ultrabeat
Any chance we can evict Neptune from the solar system?
It really isn't pulling its weight.

Do you appreciate the gravity of that accusation? :)
 
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