The vast expanse of our universe means that astronomers always find something they have never seen before. Earlier this week, astronomers spotted two bus-sized asteroids heading toward Earth, which will pass at distances just a quarter of what separates the Moon from us.
Apart from asteroids, our galaxy is also of special interest to astronomers looking for signs of other planets supporting life. Right at the center of the Milky Way though, there is a supermassive black hole that has been dubbed Sagittarius A* or Sgr A* and S4716 is orbiting this black hole at a fierce pace.
What we know about S4716
From the observations made so far, we know that at 5,000 miles (8,000 km) a second or 18 million miles (29 million km) per hour, S4716 is the fastest star orbiting Sgr A*. It completes an orbit around the 14.6 million (23.5 million km) diameter black hole in just four years.
S4716 is part of a dense group of other stars that also orbit Sgr A* which astronomers refer to as the S cluster. All stars in this cluster move at high speeds but vary in their mass and brightness. Another star in this cluster, known as S2, is more popularly known and is much larger than S4716.
"For a star to be in a stable orbit so close and fast in the vicinity of a supermassive black hole was completely unexpected," Peissker added.
The research was published in The Astrophysical Journal.
Reference(s): Space.com
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