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Related: About this forumShocking behavior of a runaway star: High-speed encounter creates arc
Roguish runaway stars can have a big impact on their surroundings as they plunge through the Milky Way galaxy. Their high-speed encounters shock the galaxy, creating arcs, as seen in a newly released image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.
In this case, the speedster star is known as Kappa Cassiopeiae, or HD 2905 to astronomers. It is a massive, hot supergiant moving at around 2.5 million mph relative to its neighbors (1,100 kilometers per second). But what really makes the star stand out in this image is the surrounding, streaky red glow of material in its path. Such structures are called bow shocks, and they can often be seen in front of the fastest, most massive stars in the galaxy.
Bow shocks form where the magnetic fields and wind of particles flowing off a star collide with the diffuse, and usually invisible, gas and dust that fill the space between stars. How these shocks light up tells astronomers about the conditions around the star and in space. Slow-moving stars like our sun have bow shocks that are nearly invisible at all wavelengths of light, but fast stars like Kappa Cassiopeiae create shocks that can be seen by Spitzer's infrared detectors.
Incredibly, this shock is created about 4 light-years ahead of Kappa Cassiopeiae, showing what a sizable impact this star has on its surroundings. (This is about the same distance that we are from Proxima Centauri, the nearest star beyond the sun.)
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/02/140221110105.htm
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Shocking behavior of a runaway star: High-speed encounter creates arc (Original Post)
n2doc
Feb 2014
OP
monmouth3
(3,871 posts)1. Quite beautiful and thank you for posting. To be honest I thought it was about Bieber..n/t
newfie11
(8,159 posts)2. Lol so did I
I was very pleased to see it is about a REAL star.
denbot
(9,901 posts)3. What would result if a collision between a star of this type and a conventional star.
Would it be a distinct type of super nova?