Runaway Star Creates Quite a Shock

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Faster than a speeding bullet, this supergiant star looks like it might be wearing a red cape. Alpha Camelopardalis, the bright star in the middle of this image, is a runaway star, moving at incredible speeds – astronomers believe could be zooming along at somewhere between 680 and 4,200 kilometers per second (between 1.5 and 9.4 million miles per hour). The speed of this star is so fast, a huge bow shock is being created as the star moves through space. Alpha Cam’s bow shock can’t be seen in visible light, but WISE’s infrared detectors allow us to see this arc of heated gas and dust around the star.

Runaway stars are kicked into motion either through the supernova explosion of a companion star or through gravitational interactions with other stars in a cluster. The WISE team explains the bow shock:

“Because Alpha Cam is a supergiant star, it gives off a very strong wind. The speed of the wind is boosted in the forward direction the star is moving in space. When this fast-moving wind slams into the slower-moving interstellar material, a bow shock is created, similar to the wake in front of the bow of a ship in water. The stellar wind compresses the interstellar gas and dust, causing it to heat up and glow in infrared.”

Just as astronomers aren’t quite sure about the speed Alpha Cam is traveling, its distance is also somewhat uncertain, but it is probably somewhere between 1,600 and 6,900 light-years away. It is located in the constellation Camelopardis, near Ursa Major. (Right ascension: 4h 54m 03.0113s, declination: +66° 20′ 33.641”)

The colors used in this image represent specific wavelengths of infrared light. Stars are seen primarily in blue and cyan (blue-green), because they are emitting light brightly at 3.4 and 4.6 microns. Green represents 12-micron light, primarily emitted by dust. The red of the blow shock represents light emitted at 22 microns.

Source: WISE

9 Replies to “Runaway Star Creates Quite a Shock”

  1. Impressive and awesome come to mind. Two questions come to mind:
    Why can’t we tell how far away it is? and
    Couldn’t it also have been thrown out by interaction with a super-massive black hole?
    Anyone?

    1. As to your second question: I learned that one possible explanation for such stars is that they were once part of a binary system which interacted with the super massive black hole at the galactic centre – resulting in one star falling into the black hole, while the other one is being accelerated enough to eventually escape the Galaxy. Apparently, there are more than a dozen such stars known, which have already escaped.

      1. Or perhaps one (instance of the star) fell into a black hole and the other escaped as hawking radiation? Or perhaps the star is an Interstellar spaceship?. It would take the energy output of an average star to achieve it. 🙂 Really is all speculation. We may know of a few stars that have left their galaxy’s, but the means by which it occurred is pure conjecture.

      2. Stellar kinematics:

        “A runaway star is one which is moving through space with an abnormally high velocity relative to the surrounding interstellar medium. The proper motion of a runaway star often points exactly away from a stellar association, whose member it therefore once must have been before it was hurled out.

        Two possible mechanisms may give rise to a runaway star:

        * In the first scenario, a close encounter between two binary systems may result in the disruption of both systems, with some of the stars being ejected at high velocities.
        * In the second scenario, a supernova explosion in a multiple star system can result in the remaining components moving away at high speed.

        While both mechanisms are theoretically possible, astronomers generally favour the supernova hypothesis as more likely in practice.”

        The link goes through some tests of the later hypothesis. So no, not pure conjecture. (If not ascertained mechanism.)

      3. Maybe I should mention (or not?), that supernova remnants are quite visible at times.

  2. “its distance is also somewhat uncertain, but it is probably somewhere between 1,600 and 6,900 light-years away.”

    That’s a big difference. I think it is miraculous that astronomers and physicists can determine the distance of a star period and this runaway demonstrates both the difficulties and challenges. The photo by the way is gorgeous. Thanks

  3. Mabe this illustrates the gravitational waves in the overall electromagnetic field of the Universe?

  4. It could have started out as a member of a triple or quadruple star system. I remember reading somewhere that if you have more than 2 stars of equal mass in a system then one or more of them will be ejected.

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