You Need To Hit Two Million Kilometres Per Hour To Exit The Milky Way

You Need To Hit Two Million Kilometres Per Hour To Exit The Milky Way

If this entire planet, solar system and galaxy just doesn’t hold enough excitement for you, be prepared to pick up some speed — because scientists have worked out that you need to be travelling at a staggering two million kilometres per hour to exit the Milky Way.

A team of researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics in Potsdam, Germany, have used data from the Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) survey to work out the exit velocity required to leave our home galaxy. By analysing the motion of 90 high-velocity stars and using a series of complex theoretical models of the galaxy’s mass calculate, they were able to calculate the speed at which objects can exit the Milky Way.

Their results suggest that a spaceship would need to hit 537km/s — that’s 0.2 per cent of the speed of light — to escape the gravitational pull of our galaxy. For context, a rocket needs to reach 11.2km/s to escape Earth’s gravity.

Is that ever going to be possible? Well, while current rockets would never make it, astronomer Joss Bland-Hawthorn explained to New Scientist that there’s another way:

“I know it’s a crazy idea, but if you had lots of matter and lots of antimatter, you could power a spaceship out of the galaxy.”

Sounds like a challenge. [arXiv via New Scientist]

Picture: GSFC


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