Subject |
has definition |
space velocity | A star's total velocity with respect to the local standard of rest. This is the combination of the star's U, V, and W velocities: space velocity = sqrt (U2 + V2 + W2). For example, the Sun (U = -9, V = +12, W = +7) has a space velocity of 17 kilometers per second. |
U velocity | The component of a star's motion away from the Galactic center. If a star moves away from the Galactic center, the star's U velocity is positive; if a star moves toward the Galactic center, the U velocity is negative; and if the star moves neither toward nor away from the Galactic center, the U velocity is zero. The Sun has a U velocity of -9 kilometers per second, so the Sun is moving toward the Galactic center at 9 kilometers per second. |
V velocity | A star's velocity in the direction of Galactic rotation, as measured relative to a nearby star that has a circular orbit. If a star revolves faster than such a star, the V velocity is positive; if it revolves more slowly, the V velocity is negative; and if both revolve at the same rate, the V velocity is zero. The Sun has a V velocity of +12 kilometers per second, so it revolves 12 kilometers per second faster than it would if it had a circular orbit. Since a star on a circular orbit revolves around the Galaxy at 220 kilometers per second, a star with a V velocity of 0 is not stationary; rather, it revolves at 220 kilometers per second. The Sun therefore revolves around the Galaxy at 220 + 12 = 232 kilometers per second. |
W velocity | A star's velocity perpendicular to the Galactic plane. If a star is moving up, its W velocity is positive; if a star is moving down, its W velocity is negative; and if a star does neither, its W velocity is zero. The Sun has a W velocity of +7 kilometers per second, so it is moving up at 7 kilometers per second. In general, the greater a star's W velocity when it crosses the Galactic plane, the farther above and below the plane the star will travel. |