Hubble Site | Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI-2010-19) | 22 July 2010
Black hole at Milky Way core powers galaxy's fastest starsNASA's Hubble Space Telescope has detected a hypervelocity star – a rare entity moving three times faster than our sun.
A hundred million years ago, a triple-star system was traveling through the bustling center of our Milky Way galaxy when it made a life-changing misstep. The trio wandered too close to the galaxy's giant black hole, which captured one of the stars and hurled the other two out of the Milky Way. Adding to the stellar game of musical chairs, the two outbound stars merged to form a super-hot, blue star.
This story may seem like science fiction, but astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope say it is the most likely scenario for a so-called hypervelocity star, known as HE 0437-5439, one of the fastest ever detected. It is blazing across space at a speed of 1.6 million miles (2.5 million kilometers) an hour, three times faster than our Sun's orbital velocity in the Milky Way. Hubble observations confirm that the stellar speedster hails from the Milky Way's core, settling some confusion over where it originally called home.
Most of the roughly 16 known hypervelocity stars, all discovered since 2005, are thought to be exiles from the heart of our galaxy. But this Hubble result is the first direct observation linking a high-flying star to a galactic center origin.
University of Michigan | 22 July 2010
A Galactic Center Origin for HE 0437−5439, the Hypervelocity Star Near the Large Magellanic CloudThe black hole at the center of the galaxy is to blame for sling-shotting "hypervelocity stars" out of the Milky Way at up to 1.8 million miles per hour, according to new evidence from research involving a University of Michigan astronomer.
Hypervelocity stars, discovered about five years ago, are the fastest stars astronomers have ever observed. They are escaping the galaxy at beyond what was thought to be its stellar speed limit.
The researchers used the Hubble Space Telescope to trace the trajectory and origin of HE 0437−5439, a speeding star in the southern hemisphere too faint to be seen with the naked eye. A paper about their findings has been accepted to Astrophysical Journal Letters.
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Just 16 hypervelocity stars have been discovered so far. There are 100 billion stars in the Milky Way.
The paper is titled "A Galactic Center Origin for HE 0437−5439, the Hypervelocity Star Near the Large Magellanic Cloud." This research is funded by NASA and the Smithsonian Institution.
- Astrophysical Journal Letters 719 L23 (2010 Aug 10) doi: 10.1088/2041-8205/719/1/L23
arXiv.org > astro-ph > arXiv:1007.3493 > 20 July 2010