380 research outputs found
Open clusters with Hipparcos I. Mean astrometric parameters
New memberships, mean parallaxes and proper motions of all 9 open clusters
closer than 300 pc (except the Hyades) and 9 rich clusters between 300 and 500
pc have been computed using Hipparcos data. Precisions, ranging from 0.2 to 0.5
mas for parallaxes and 0.1 to 0.5 mas/yr for proper motions, are of great
interest for calibrating photometric parallaxes as well as for kinematical
studies. Careful investigations of possible biases have been performed and no
evidence of significant systematic errors on the mean cluster parallaxes has
been found. The distances and proper motions of 32 more distant clusters, which
may be used statistically, are also indicated.Comment: 15 pages, A&A in pres
Proper motion of very low mass stars and brown dwarfs in the Pleiades cluster
We report proper motion measurements for 25 very-low mass (VLM) star and
brown dwarf (BD) candidates of the Pleiades cluster previously identified by
Bouvier et al. (1998). Proper motions are measured with an accuracy of 9
mas/yr, compared to an expected tangential motion of about 50 mas/yr for
Pleiades members. Of the 25 candidates, 15 have a membership probability of 95%
or more and 7 are rejected as being field dwarfs. The 3 remaining candidates
exhibit independent evidence for membership (lithium absorption or long-term
proper motion). From the firm identification of Pleiades VLM and BD members,
the cluster's substellar mass function is revised to dN/dM \propto M^{-0.5} in
the mass range from 0.04 to 0.3 M_solar.Comment: 7 pages, 2 tables, 2 figures, accepted by A&
A Hubble Space Telescope ACS Search for Brown Dwarf Binaries in the Pleiades Open Cluster
We present the results of a high-resolution imaging survey for brown dwarf
binaries in the Pleiades open cluster. The observations were carried out with
the Advance Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Our sample
consists of 15 bona-fide brown dwarfs. We confirm 2 binaries and detect their
orbital motion, but we did not resolve any new binary candidates in the
separation range between 5.4AU and 1700AU and masses in the range
0.035--0.065~Msun. Together with the results of our previous study (Martin et
al., 2003), we can derive a visual binary frequency of 13.3\%
for separations greater than 7~AU masses between 0.055--0.065~M_{\sun} and
mass ratios between 0.45--0.91.0. The other observed properties of
Pleiades brown dwarf binaries (distributions of separation and mass ratio)
appear to be similar to their older counterparts in the field.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
WISE Circumstellar Disks in the Young Sco-Cen Association
We present an analysis of the WISE photometric data for 829 stars in the
Sco-Cen OB2 association, using the latest high-mass membership probabilities.
We detect infrared excesses associated with 135 BAF-type stars, 99 of which are
secure Sco-Cen members. There is a clear increase in excess fraction with
membership probability, which can be fitted linearly. We infer that 41+-5% of
Sco-Cen OB2 BAF stars to have excesses, while the field star excess fraction is
consistent with zero. This is the first time that the probability of
non-membership has been used in the calculation of excess fractions for young
stars. We do not observe any significant change in excess fraction between the
three subgroups. Within our sample, we have observed that B-type association
members have a significantly smaller excess fraction than A and F-type
association members.Comment: 5 Pages, 3 figure, 4 tables. Complete table 1 included. Accepted to
MNRAS Letter
Debris Disks in NGC 2547
We have surveyed the 30 Myr-old cluster NGC 2547 for planetary debris disks
using Spitzer. At 4.5-8 um we are sensitive to the photospheric level down to
mid-M stars (0.2 Msol) and at 24 um to early-G stars (1.2 Msol). We find only
two to four stars with excesses at 8 um out of ~400-500 cluster members,
resulting in an excess fraction <~1 percent at this wavelength. By contrast,
the excess fraction at 24 um is ~40 percent (for B-F types). Out of four
late-type stars with excesses at 8 um two marginal ones are consistent with
asteroid-like debris disks. Among stars with strong 8 um excesses one is
possibly from a transitional disk, while another one can be a result of a
catastrophic collision. Our survey demonstrates that the inner 0.1-1 AU parts
of disks around solar-type stars clear out very thoroughly by 30 Myrs of age.
Comparing with the much slower decay of excesses at 24 and 70 um, disks clear
from the inside out, of order 10 Myr for the inner zones probed at 8 um
compared with a hundred or more Myr for those probed with the two longer
wavelengths.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 29 pages, 13 figs. A Note in Proof concerning
cluster's age was added in the original submission of 2007 July 19. Full
Tables 1 and 2 in the electronic form together with the article with full
resolution figures are available at
http://www.astro.ufl.edu/~ngorlova/disksNGC2547
A New Nearby Candidate Star Cluster in Ophiuchus at d = 170 pc
The recent discoveries of nearby star clusters and associations within a few
hundred pc of the Sun, as well as the order of magnitude difference in the
formation rates of the embedded and open cluster populations, suggests that
additional poor stellar groups are likely to be found at surprisingly close
distances to the Sun. Here I describe a new nearby stellar aggregate found by
virtue of the parallel proper motions, similar trigonometric parallaxes, and
consistent color-magnitude distribution of its early-type members. The 120
Myr-old group lies in Ophiuchus at 170 pc, with its most massive
member being the 4th-magnitude post-MS B8II-III star Oph. The group may
have escaped previous notice due to its non-negligible extinction (
0.9 mag). If the group was born with a normal initial mass function,
and the nine B- and A-type systems represent a complete system of
intermediate-mass stars, then the original population was probably of order
200 systems. The age and space motion of the new cluster are very similar
to those of the Pleiades, Per cluster, and AB Dor Moving Group,
suggesting that these aggregates may have formed in the same star-forming
complex some yr ago.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figs., to appear in Nov. 2006 A
Photometric Monitoring of Open Clusters I. The Survey
Open clusters, which have age, abundance, and extinction information from
studies of main-sequence turn off stars, are the ideal location in which to
determine the mass-luminosity-radius relation for low-mass stars. We have
undertaken a photometric monitoring survey of open clusters in the Galaxy
designed to detect low-mass eclipsing binary systems through variations in
their relative light curves. Our aim is to provide an improved calibration of
the mass-luminosity-radius relation for low-mass stars and brown dwarfs, to
test stellar structure and evolution models, and to help quantify the
contribution of low-mass stars to the global mass census in the Galaxy. In this
paper we present our survey, describing the data and outlining the analysis
techniques. We study six nearby open clusters, with a range of ages from to 4 Gyr and metallicities from approximately solar to -0.2dex. We monitor
a field-of-view of > 1 square degree per target cluster, well beyond the
characteristic cluster radius, over timescales of hours, days, and months with
a sampling rate optimised for the detection of eclipsing binaries with periods
of hours to days. Our survey depth is designed to detect eclipse events in a
binary with a primary star of \lesssim 0.3~M_{\sun}. Our data have a
photometric precision of mmag at .Comment: 50 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A
Identifying nearby field T dwarfs in the UKIDSS Galactic Clusters Survey
‘The definitive version is available at www3.interscience.wiley.com '. Copyright Royal Astronomical Society. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2008.14384.xWe present the discovery of two new late-T dwarfs identified in the UKIRT Infrared Deep Sky Survey (UKIDSS) Galactic Clusters Survey (GCS) Data Release 2 (DR2). These T dwarfs are nearby old T dwarfs along the line of sight to star-forming regions and open clusters targeted by the UKIDSS GCS. They are found towards the α Per cluster and Orion complex, respectively, from a search in 54 deg2 surveyed in five filters. Photometric candidates were picked up in two-colour diagrams, in a very similar manner to candidates extracted from the UKIDSS Large Area Survey (LAS) but taking advantage of the Z filter employed by the GCS. Both candidates exhibit near-infrared J-band spectra with strong methane and water absorption bands characteristic of late-T dwarfs. We derive spectral types of T6.5 ± 0.5 and T7 ± 1 and estimate photometric distances less than 50 pc for UGCS J030013.86+490142.5 and UGCS J053022.52−052447.4, respectively. The space density of T dwarfs found in the GCS seems consistent with discoveries in the larger areal coverage of the UKIDSS LAS, indicating one T dwarf in 6–11 deg2. The final area surveyed by the GCS, 1000 deg2 in five passbands, will allow expansion of the LAS search area by 25 per cent, increase the probability of finding ultracool brown dwarfs, and provide optimal estimates of contamination by old field brown dwarfs in deep surveys to identify such objects in open clusters and star-forming regions.Peer reviewe
Explaining the Praesepe blue straggler HD 73666
The blue straggler phenomenon is not yet well explained by current theory;
however, evolutionary models of star clusters call for a good knowledge of it.
Here we try to understand the possible formation scenario of HD 73666, a blue
straggler member of the Praesepe cluster. We compile the known physical
properties of HD 73666 found in the literature, focusing in particular on
possible binarity and the abundance pattern. HD 73666 appears to be slowly
rotating, has no detectable magnetic field, and has normal abundances, thereby
excluding close binary evolution and mass transfer processes. There is no
evidence of a hot radiation source. With the use of theoretical results on blue
straggler formation present in literature, we are able to conclude that HD
73666 was probably formed by physical collision involving at least one binary
system, between 5 and 350 Myr (50 Myr if the star is an intrinsic slow rotator)
ago.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic
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