According to the books, it has the largest known proper motion of any star relative to the Sun, and moves about 10.3 arcseconds per year relative to our view of the background stars. To give some perspective of what 10.3 arcseconds is, Jupiter as seen from Earth has an apparent diameter of around 30 arcseconds. The 10.3 seconds of arc it travels annually amounts to a quarter of a degree in a human lifetime, roughly half the angular diameter of the full Moon.
So as stars go, or rather don't, Barnard's Star moves quite fast from our perspective. No wonder it is also known as "Barnard's Runaway Star".
In absolute terms, the radial velocity of Barnard's Star towards the Sun has been measured at around 142.7 km/s.
It is a low-mass red dwarf star, of spectral type M4 (i.e. the last letter in OBAFGKM). It has an apparent magnitude of 9.5.
Barnard's Star is only 5.98 light years from the Sun. It's the 4th nearest known star, after the three stars of the Alpha Centauri system (one of which is Proxima Centauri which is the nearest at 4.24 light yrs away).
More info about it here:
http://www.nightskyinfo.com/archive/barnard_star/
http://spider.seds.org/spider/Misc/barnard.html
I decided to photograph Barnard's Star today and then take another photo of it in about 6 months' time, 1 year's time, etc, to see if I could detect and perhaps even measure its motion. This of course has been done by many others countless times in the past. But why not also do so myself for the fun of it? It is also to show that some basic science can be done with amateur astronomy equipment from urban Singapore.
So, for starters, here is a photo of Barnard's Star taken this evening, with annotations of information on the surrounding stars taken from The Sky6 software (which actually has 2 stars labelled as Barnard's Star due to an error in using different catalogues - due no doubt to its proper motion).
For information, the two bright stars nearest Barnard's Star in the photo are 98 arcseconds part, as annotated. Below the main photo is the same photo further cropped (but at 100% zoom, i.e. no zoom) and without the annotations.
And see you Barnard's Star next year!

