Slashdot Mirror


Stars Traveling Close To Light Speed Could Spread Life Through the Universe

KentuckyFC writes Stars in the Milky Way typically travel at a few hundred kilometers per second relative to their peers. But in recent years, astronomers have found a dozen or so "hypervelocity stars" traveling at up to 1000 kilometers per second, fast enough to escape our galaxy entirely. And they have observed stars orbiting the supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy traveling at least an order of magnitude faster than this, albeit while gravitationally bound. Now a pair of astrophysicists have discovered a mechanism that would free these stars, sending them rocketing into intergalactic space at speeds in excess of 100,000 kilometers per second. That's more than a third of the speed of light. They calculate that there should be about 100,000 of these stars in every cubic gigaparsec of space and that the next generation of space telescopes will be sensitive to spot them. That's interesting because these stars will be cosmological messengers that can tell us about the conditions in other parts of the universe when they formed. And because these stars can travel across much of the observable universe throughout their lifetimes, they could also be responsible for spreading life throughout the cosmos.

5 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. Re: Cubic gigaparsec ... by AA1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    (2.93799895 Ã-- 10^79) liters in cubic gigaparsec divided by about 2.5 million liters per Olympic pool, so roughly 1.1751996e+73 pools.

  2. Re:I don't understand this ... by khasim · · Score: 4, Informative

    The bit of 'spreading life' doesn't make sense.

    That's what I thought, also. Even if they were dragging planets with them (is it possible for planets to orbit that fast?) wouldn't the planets have been sterilized by the conditions at the center of whatever galaxies they came from?

    Just finding one of them should be cool enough. There's no need to postulate about "life".

  3. Re:I don't understand this ... by Immerman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Relativistic effects are a non-issue because there is no preferred reference frame in the universe. Our own sun is at this very moment moving at 99.9999999% of lightspeed, when observed from the appropriate position. When observed from there the relativistic effects are quite profound, but the beauty of relativistic effects is that their existence is entirely dependent upon the observer's frame of reference - a thousand different observers on a thousand different relativistic trajectories will see a thousand different sets of relativistic effects on us, and yet we, in a more local frame of reference see virtually none. And every one of those thousands of different observations are all mathematically equivalent.

    --
    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  4. Re: Cubic gigaparsec ... by buchner.johannes · · Score: 4, Informative

    Unfortunately, space is not Euclidean on giga-parsec scales. Here, when talking about 5000 Gpc, they refer to a "comoving scale". That is a scale where the expansion of the universe has been divided out, so that e.g. the same number of galaxies remain in this box. So if you would place the atoms of the number of swimming pools you computed in the volume, they would be twice as dense at the largest distances, where the Universe was half the current size. Also, the largest distance within a 5000 Gpc^3 is 3200 Gpc (space is not Euclidean).

    --
    NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
  5. Re:I don't understand this ... by careysub · · Score: 4, Informative

    Answers to various comments/questions on this sub-thread:

    Time dilation at 1/3 c is 5.7%, quite a noticeable amount, but not remotely close to to turning billions of years into millions.

    Tidal effects are small for super-massive galactic black holes. I doubt tidal disruption of Earth-like (i.e. fairly close) orbits would occur, especially for cool M-type stars (the most common kind).

    While individual particles of cosmic dust hitting the planet at 1/3 c won't be a problem, (they will simply explode high in the upper atmosphere), the energy flux hitting the atmosphere from interstellar gas would be considerable. Average interstellar space has something like 1,000,000 hydrogen atoms per cubic meter. At 100,000 km/sec every second there would be 100,000*1,000*1,000,000= 10^14 hydrogen atoms hitting each square meter of atmosphere. The kinetic energy of those atoms would be about 1000 J, so roughly 1000 watts/m^2 of heating from interstellar hydrogen. Earth gets 1400 watts/M^2 of heat from the Sun, so it would roughly double the heating of an Earth-like world until it cleared the galaxy plane. If it ran into a denser patch (all of the region in the galactic center would be denser than the average I quoted) then the heating could be 10, 100, even 1000 times higher for a bit. I think this would cook any existing Earth-like planet.

    Once in interstellar space though the heat load would drop by a factor of 10,000 to 100,000 of the average interstellar value and would cease to be significant. From there on the planet and star system would evolve on their own, and a new biosphere could come into existence.

    --
    Starships were meant to fly, Hands up and touch the sky - Nicky Minaj