An Old, Low-mass, Metal-poor Hypervelocity Star Candidate Consistent with a Galactic Center Origin
Shunhong Deng, Yang Huang, Haozhu Fu, Yongkang Sun, Qikang Feng + 2 more
TLDR
Discovery of DESI-HVS1, an old, low-mass, metal-poor hypervelocity star candidate from the Galactic Center.
Key contributions
- Discovered DESI-HVS1, an old, low-mass, metal-poor F-type hypervelocity star candidate.
- Its Galactocentric velocity of 523 km/s marginally exceeds local escape speed (P_ub ~ 50%).
- Backward orbit integrations confirm a close approach to the Galactic Center (0.4 kpc).
- This is the first strong evidence for an old, low-mass HVS from the GC, challenging selection bias.
Why it matters
This paper provides the first strong evidence for an old, low-mass hypervelocity star from the Galactic Center. It challenges the assumption that most such stars are young and massive, suggesting previous observations were skewed by selection effects. This broadens our understanding of stars ejected from the galaxy's core.
Original Abstract
We report the discovery of DESI-HVS1, a hypervelocity star (HVS) candidate identified from DESI DR1 spectroscopy and Gaia DR3 astrometry. DESI-HVS1 is an old, low-mass, metal-poor F-type star with a mass of $0.8\,M_\odot$, an age of $\sim14.1$~Gyr, and $\mathrm{[Fe/H]}=-1.6$. It is located at a heliocentric distance of $3.77^{+0.39}_{-0.36}$~kpc and has a Galactocentric total velocity of $523^{+46}_{-47}\,\mathrm{km\,s^{-1}}$, marginally exceeding the local escape speed, corresponding to an unbound probability of $P_{\rm ub} \sim 50\%$. Backward orbit integrations show that DESI-HVS1 had a closest approach to the Galactic Centre (GC) of $0.40^{+0.23}_{-0.11}\,\mathrm{kpc}$, with a velocity of $682^{+22}_{-35}\,\mathrm{km\,s^{-1}}$ and a flight time of $12.89^{+0.92}_{-0.74}\,\mathrm{Myr}$. The reconstructed orbit exhibits a clear perigalactic turning point and only a single crossing of the Galactic midplane ($P_{\rm cross} > 0.95$). These properties suggest that DESI-HVS1 is most naturally explained by the Hills mechanism, although alternative scenarios cannot be entirely ruled out. Its discovery provides the first strong evidence for an old, low-mass HVS candidate consistent with a GC origin, indicating that the apparent dominance of young, massive GC-origin HVSs is likely a consequence of observational selection effects.
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