Chinese astronomers just discovered 90 stars moving so fast they're escaping our galaxy forever. These hypervelocity stars—flung out by close encounters with supermassive black holes—are traveling at speeds that defy the Milky Way's gravitational grip.
Using RR Lyrae stars as cosmic speedometers and data from the Gaia satellite, researchers are tracking these runaway suns to map something we can't see: dark matter. Their trajectories reveal the invisible gravitational scaffolding holding our galaxy together.
We explore how stars get ejected at millions of miles per hour, what their escape routes tell us about the Milky Way's hidden mass, and why these cosmic refugees are helping astronomers solve one of the universe's biggest mysteries—the structure and evolution of our galactic home.
Thank you for listening to Bedtime Astronomy — your guide to the cosmos. New episodes on space exploration, NASA missions & the latest astronomy breakthroughs.
Using RR Lyrae stars as cosmic speedometers and data from the Gaia satellite, researchers are tracking these runaway suns to map something we can't see: dark matter. Their trajectories reveal the invisible gravitational scaffolding holding our galaxy together.
We explore how stars get ejected at millions of miles per hour, what their escape routes tell us about the Milky Way's hidden mass, and why these cosmic refugees are helping astronomers solve one of the universe's biggest mysteries—the structure and evolution of our galactic home.
Thank you for listening to Bedtime Astronomy — your guide to the cosmos. New episodes on space exploration, NASA missions & the latest astronomy breakthroughs.
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