Shot from the Heart of the Milky Way: Discovery of an Old Hypervelocity Star

Zooming through the galaxy faster than they should, hypervelocity stars are a curious population of stars whose origins are often difficult to determine. A recent study presents the first evidence of an old, low-mass hypervelocity star launched from the Milky Way’s center, providing clues into this elusive set of fast-moving stars.

Flinging Fast Stars

Astronomers have caught a number of hypervelocity stars zipping through the Milky Way since their first discovery in 2005. With speeds fast enough to escape the galaxy, hypervelocity stars were launched off course by some strong dynamical interaction. One such method, known as the Hills mechanism, predicts that when a binary star system approaches the Milky Way’s central supermassive black hole, one binary member is captured by the black hole and the other is flung away with high velocity.

However, constraining a hypervelocity star’s origin to the galactic center is limited by uncertainties in distances and proper motions, muddling how well researchers have been able to trace their orbits backward. Among a number of candidate galactic centerorigin hypervelocity stars, only one has been confidently identified as having been kicked from the galaxy’s center. Intriguingly, this hypervelocity star and most galactic centerorigin candidates are young, massive stars — old, low-mass hypervelocity stars from the galactic center have yet to be identified.

What does this dearth of old, low-mass zooming stars mean? Either stars in the galactic center are preferentially young and massive, with fewer than expected old and small stars, or low-mass hypervelocity stars are missed by selection effects, challenging to detect in current surveys. Searching for hypervelocity stars with higher precision and sensitivity may allow astronomers to tease out this missing population and trace back more zooming stars to a Hills mechanism origin.

Discovering An Old Hypervelocity Star

Leveraging high-quality spectra from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey and precise astrometry from Gaia, Shunhong Deng (University of Chinese Academy of Sciences; China West Normal University) and collaborators reported the discovery of the hypervelocity star DESI-HVS1. From the spectroscopic and astrometric analyses, the authors determined that DESI-HSV1 is a ~14-billion-year-old low-metallicity star with a mass about 80% that of the Sun’s, moving through the galaxy at 523 km/s.

Backward orbit integration

Backward-integrated orbits of DESI-HVS1 for three different galactic potential models. The blue, red, and green points show the star’s current position, closest approach to the galactic center, and position 50 million years ago, respectively. Click to enlarge. [Deng et al 2026]

Exploring the possible origins of this hypervelocity star, the authors integrated the star’s orbit backward in time for one billion years. The backward orbit integrations show the star approaching the galactic center where it then turns around, traveling away faster than the local escape velocity of the galaxy. Even when varying the galactic potential and constants, all orbit integrations suggest DESI-HVS1’s motion through the galaxy is most naturally explained by the Hills mechanism.

While more refined galaxy models and comparison to other candidate galactic centerorigin hypervelocity stars are necessary to fully confirm its origins, DESI-HVS1 provides the first compelling evidence for an old, low-mass hypervelocity star candidate consistent with a galactic center launch. This suggests that the observed lack of such stars is likely not a reflection of the Milky Way’s central stellar population, but rather a consequence of observational constraints making such small hypervelocity stars particularly difficult to detect. As large spectroscopic and astrometric surveys continue to advance, the sample of galactic-center hypervelocity star candidates will grow, enabling further exploration of the stellar environment and dynamical processes at the Milky Way’s core.

Citation

“An Old, Low-mass, Metal-poor Hypervelocity Star Candidate Consistent with Galactic Center Origin,” Shunhong Deng et al 2026 ApJL 1003 L9. doi:10.3847/2041-8213/ae6505