Aspects of this topic are discussed in the following places at Britannica.
A complete knowledge of a star’s motion in space is possible only when both its proper motion and radial velocity can be measured. Proper motion is the motion of a star across an observer’s line of sight and constitutes the rate at which the direction of the star changes in the celestial sphere. It is usually measured in seconds of arc per year. Radial velocity is the motion of a star along the...
...VR) indicate approach (see Doppler effect; redshift). If the parallax is known, measurements of μ and VR enable a determination of the space motion of the star. Normally, radial velocities are corrected for Earth’s rotation and for its motion around the Sun, so that they refer to the line-of-sight motion of the star with respect to...
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