Abstract

We study the distribution of interstellar matter near the galactic plane on the basis of open star clusters and reviewed the correlation of extinction with different physical parameters of the clusters to understand the galactic structure. It is seen from the extinction towards open clusters that about 90% of the absorbing material lie within -5<b<5 deg of the galactic plane. The mean thickness of the absorbing material, which is determined in terms of half-width value \beta, is estimated to be about 125+/-21 pc. We show that the interstellar absorption follows a sinusoidal variation with galactic longitude and maximum and minimum absorptions occur at l ~ 48+/-4 deg and l ~ 228+/-4 deg respectively. It is found that the galactic plane defined by the reddening material is inclined by an angle of 0.6+/-0.4 deg to the formal galactic plane and inclination is maximum at l ~ 54+/-6 deg. The reddening analysis has been used to constrain the Solar offset which is found to be about 22.8+/-3.3 pc above the reddening plane. We obtained a scale height of 53+/-5 pc for the distribution of open clusters while it is 186+/-25 pc for the distribution of reddening material from the reddening plane.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures, accepted for the publication in MNRA

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    Last time updated on 05/06/2019