Star Flung From Milky Way at High Speed
fenimor writes "Using the MMT Observatory in Tucson, astronomers have discovered a star three times bigger than the sun, leaving our galaxy at a speed of over 1.5 million miles per hour (670 kilometers per second). The first-of-its-kind finding not only confirms an earlier theory about the existence of such speeding stars, but also reinforces the notion that the Milky Way spins around a black hole."
relative to what?
It still amazes me how they can measure that kind of stuff.
What are they measuring the star's speed against? The center of our galaxy? The earth?
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
It's relative speed to us (eg. the sun, or any other mass).
In the void of space this has no consequences for the mass that is speeding. (Until it collides with something that has a different speed.)
Abruptly increasing acceleration could rip it apart though, but that's another story.
They aren't torn apart for multiple reasons. One of them is that there is nothing for them to hit that will tear them apart. Going millions of mph is different in a vacuum than it is in the earth's atmosphere. To get more complex, to the star it's not moving, the rest of the galaxy is. To understand more of what I'm talking about read about the reference frame in any basics physics book.
c# - Wait, it's not pronounced coctothorpe?
I just wonder why the star and the planets are not torn apart by such huge speeds?
a) we're not sure it has planets.
b) it's not velocity that kills, it's acceleration.
c) this acceleration can only be explained by current theory if it was a gravitational acceleration.
d) gravitational acceleration acts on all elements of an object equally, meaning that there was no force from the acceleration itself acting to tear the object apart. Just like when you're in freefall, you don't feel gravity acting on you.
Now TIDAL gravity can tear objects apart, but since the gravitationally assisted acceleration likely happened in the galactic core, the tides were probably pretty gentle... the tidal force at a black hole's horizon can be expressed as a function of mass over surface area; the bigger the hole, the less the tides.
I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
Is there *really* a difference, physically, on an object moving at 1.5MM mph and one standing completely still, if they're not interacting with anything else? No. Their inertias are the same, so their physical properties and interactions are the same.
Momentum, however, could be a bitch. Imagine this star slamming into another star (or, a la the Death Star, a small planet in the Aldeberan system). Ka-pow, with the graphic like on the old Batman series! Would make Levy-Shoemaker look like a BB gun (you're gonna put your eye out!)...
there probably would be no kinetic interaction between the two if they were to "collide".
I would bet that there would be a number of stars in the galaxies that would have their motions markedly changed. You'ld probably have a number of stars being scattered around and exiting the galaxies at high velocities relative to other stars . There may even be an actual collision or two.