Study of color-magnitude diagram of star cluster SL 506

2020 ◽  
Vol 365 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhongmu Li ◽  
Jing Chen ◽  
Su Zhang ◽  
Yangyang Deng ◽  
Wenchang Zhao
2019 ◽  
Vol 628 ◽  
pp. A45 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Gran ◽  
M. Zoccali ◽  
R. Contreras Ramos ◽  
E. Valenti ◽  
A. Rojas-Arriagada ◽  
...  

Context. Thanks to the recent wide-area photometric surveys, the number of star cluster candidates have risen exponentially in the last few years. Most detections, however, are based only on the presence of an overdensity of stars in a given region or an overdensity of variable stars, regardless of their distance. As candidates, their detection has not been dynamically confirmed. Therefore, it is currently unknown how many and which of the published candidates are true clusters and which are chance alignments. Aims. We present a method to detect and confirm star clusters based on the spatial distribution, coherence in motion, and appearance on the color-magnitude diagram. We explain and apply this approach to one new star cluster and several candidate star clusters published in the literature. Methods. The presented method is based on data from the second data release of Gaia complemented with data from the VISTA Variables in the Vía Láctea survey for the innermost bulge regions. This method consists of a nearest neighbors algorithm applied simultaneously over spatial coordinates, star color, and proper motions to detect groups of stars that are close in the sky, move coherently, and define narrow sequences in the color-magnitude diagram, such as a young main sequence or a red giant branch. Results. When tested in the bulge area (−10 <  ℓ (deg) <  +10; −10 <  b (deg) <  +10) the method successfully recovered several known young and old star clusters. We report in this work the detection of one new, likely old star cluster, while deferring the others to a forthcoming paper. Additionally, the code has been applied to the position of 93 candidate star clusters published in the literature. As a result, only two of these clusters are confirmed as coherently moving groups of stars at their nominal positions.


1999 ◽  
Vol 193 ◽  
pp. 478-479
Author(s):  
Daniel Devost ◽  
Claus Leitherer

We present results of an HST archive study of the star cluster NGC 3603. The color-magnitude diagram (CMD) and the radial profiles have been derived using HST-nicmos F110W and F171M images. As expected, the CMD shows that the cluster is very young (< 3 Myr) and that a significant portion of the stellar population (M < 4M⊙) is on the pre-main sequence phase. From the radial profiles, we derive a similar half-light radius for both wavebands of 0.17 pc.


1991 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 198-199
Author(s):  
T. Richtler ◽  
Klaas S. De Boer ◽  
A. Vallenari ◽  
W. Seggewiss

A colour-magnitude diagram (CMD) of the region containing the intermediate-age SMC globular cluster NGC 152 was published recently (Melcher & Richtler 1989). A particularly interesting feature of this CMD is the “clump” of He-core burning stars, which are predominantly field stars. A selection of stars near the cluster centre leads to the CMD shown in Figure 1. The vertical extension of the clump (explainable by the evolution of stars younger than 1 Gyr) is replaced by a “tilted horizontal branch” (we use this expression for lack of a better one). The age of NGC 152 is about 1.3 Gyr and the reddening is small; the metallicity is unknown but less than −0.6 dex, which is the mean metallicity of the young SMC population. The tilted HB can be reproduced in CMD simulations using the method developed by Vallenari et al. (1990), and thus can be considered as a normal feature of star clusters like NGC 152. It is evident also in other intermediate-age MC clusters like Kron 3 (Rich et al. 1984).


2017 ◽  
Vol 470 (1) ◽  
pp. L77-L81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrés E. Piatti ◽  
Andrew Cole

Abstract We report that the serendipitous young Large Magellanic Cloud cluster NGC 1971 exhibits an extended main-sequence turn-off (eMSTO) possibly originated mostly by a real age spread. We used CT1 Washington photometry to produce a colour–magnitude diagram (CMD) with the fiducial cluster features. From its eMSTO, we estimated an age spread of ∼170 Myr (observed age range 100–280 Myr), once observational errors, stellar binarity, overall metallicity variations and stellar rotation effects were subtracted in quadrature from the observed age width.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 14-17
Author(s):  
Indra Putri, Annisa Novia Indra Putri, Annisa Novia

1984 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 43-44
Author(s):  
L. L. Stryker ◽  
J. M. Nemec ◽  
J. E. Hesser ◽  
R.D. McClure

The age of the star cluster H11 has been controversial for a number of years. The color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of Walker (1979) to V=21.5 was interpreted as an “…evolved main-sequence, whose termination point corresponds to an age of about 0.6 Gyr, but with a giant branch which is displaced blueward by about Δ (B-V)o=0.4 from the positions of the giant branches of open clusters of similar age in our Galaxy.” On the other hand, the integrated colors are similar to those of metal-poor globular clusters in the Galaxy (Freeman and Gascoigne 1977, and references therein), and “…incompatible with an age of say 0.3 Gyr.” Searle, Wilkinson and Bagnuolo (1980) classify it as Group VII, the oldest group. The system has no RR Lyrae stars (Graham and Nemec 1984).


2020 ◽  
Vol 497 (3) ◽  
pp. 2562-2568
Author(s):  
Estefanía Casal ◽  
Matilde Fernández ◽  
Emilio J Alfaro ◽  
Víctor Casanova ◽  
Ángel Tobaruela

ABSTRACT In the frame of a study of the empirical isochrones of young stellar clusters, we have carried out BVIc Johnson–Cousins photometry of a sample of K and M stars of the Coma Berenices star cluster. All these stars have known rotational periods. Our main goal is to get a valuable reference on the colour–magnitude diagram, Mv versus B − V, for stars with ages within 400–800 Myr. For this purpose, we obtained BVIc photometry with an average upper limit for the precision of about 0.025 mag and used parallaxes from the Gaia Data Release 2. We found that one-third of our sample is located well above the cluster main sequence and these stars are confirmed as background giants by their radial velocities in the Gaia Data Release 2. This misclassification shows that giants with short-surface rotational periods can mimic main-sequence stars if they are located at the appropriate distance. We recommend caution when using rotational periods in order to determine cluster membership. Besides, the gyrochronology technique should be used only when the luminosity class of the stars is well known. Finally, our cleared sample supports an age of ∼600 Myr for Coma Berenices, rather than an age of ∼800 Myr.


1995 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 43-47
Author(s):  
K.-H. Hofmann ◽  
G. Weigelt ◽  
W. Seggewiss

We present diffraction-limited speckle-masking observations of the central object HD 97950 in the giant HII region and star cluster NGC 3603. Twenty-eight stellar components have been detected in the 6.″3 x 6.″3 field from our reconstructed images. Four different filter combinations were used for the selection of distinct spectral regions comprising Hα emission, the main Wolf-Rayet and Of-type emission lines, and two continuum bands. Stellar components having WN-type characteristics have been found. A color-magnitude diagram has been constructed. Isochrone fits yield a cluster age of about 3.2 Myr, which is in accordance with the time-scale of Wolf-Rayet star evolution.


1984 ◽  
Vol 96 ◽  
pp. 406 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Hesser ◽  
R. D. McClure ◽  
T. G. Hawarden ◽  
R. D. Cannon ◽  
R. von Rudloff ◽  
...  

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