Abundance Gradient from Open Clusters and Implications for the Galactic Disk Evolution

2002 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Liang Hou,Rui-Xiang Chang ◽  
Li Chen
2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S266) ◽  
pp. 487-490
Author(s):  
D. B. Pavani ◽  
L. O. Kerber ◽  
E. Bica ◽  
W. J. Maciel

AbstractOpen cluster remnants (OCRs) are fundamental objects to investigate open cluster dissolution processes (e.g., Bica et al. 2001; Carraro 2002; Pavani et al. 2003; Carraro et al. 2007; Pavani & Bica 2007). They are defined as poorly populated concentrations of stars, with enough members to show evolutionary sequences in colour–magnitude diagrams (CMDs) as a result of the dynamical evolution of an initially more massive physical system. An OCR is intrinsically poorly populated, which makes its differentiation from field-star fluctuations difficult. Among the possible approaches to establish the nature of OCRs, we adopted CMD analysis combined with a robust statistical tool applied to 2mass data. In addition, photometry is the main information source available for possible OCRs (POCRs). We developed a statistical diagnostic tool to analyse the CMDs of POCRs and verify them as physical systems, explore membership probabilityies taking into account field contamination and derive age, distance and reddening values in a self-consistent way. We present the results of our analysis of 88 POCRs that are part of a larger sample that is widely distributed across the sky, with a significant density contrast of bright stars compared to the Galactic field. The 88 objects are projected onto low-density Galactic fields, at relatively high latitudes (|b| > 15°). Studies of larger POCR samples will provide a better understanding of OCR properties and constraints for theoretical models, including new insights into the evolution of open clusters and their dissolution rates. The results of this ongoing survey will provide a general picture of these fossil stellar systems and their connection to Galactic-disk evolution.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S298) ◽  
pp. 304-309
Author(s):  
J.L. Hou ◽  
L. Chen ◽  
J.C. Yu ◽  
J. Sellwood ◽  
C. Pryor

AbstractIn this paper, we present our recent work on the evolution of abundance gradients along the Milky Way disk based on the Geneva Copenhagen Survey (GCS) and Radial Velocity Experiment (RAVE) data. We will also discuss the role of the LAMOST Milky Way disk survey in clarifying the properties of metallicity breaks observed through open clusters and young tracers along the Milky Way disk. It is believed that the Galactic disk forms inside-out, in which the stellar population at increasing radii is younger and more metal poor. This picture is consistent with most Galactic Chemical Evolution (GCE) models which also predict a tight correlation between the metallicity and age of stars at a given radius. However, it is only a result of “steady state" and no dynamical evolution effects were taken into account. We have selected two stellar samples from GCS and RAVE, each sample contains about 10,000 local thin-disk, main-sequence stars. We use the guiding radius which is determined by the conservation of z-direction angular momentum, to eliminate the blurring effects. And also use the effective temperature of the main sequence stars as a proxy of stellar age. It is shown that the metallicity gradient flattens as the age increases. This is not consistent with our previous GCE prediction, but can be explained by radial mixing effects. In order to further demonstrate the abundance breaks observed in the Galactic disk we have proposed, and have been carrying out, an open cluster survey project based on LAMOST. We plan to observe at least 400 open clusters in the northern Galactic sky. From the observations, we will get uniform parameters for those clusters with radial velocity and metallicities. We anticipate that this uniform open cluster sample could clarify the observed abundance break around the Milky Way disk corotation radius and also give a more robust result concerning the evolution of the abundance gradient.


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 430-432
Author(s):  
Ted Von Hippel

The study of cluster white dwarfs (WDs) has been invigorated recently bythe Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Recent WD studies have been motivated by the new and independent cluster distance (Renzini et al. 1996), age (von Hippel et al. 1995; Richer et al. 1997), and stellar evolution (Koester & Reimers 1996) information that cluster WDs can provide. An important byproduct of these studies has been an estimate of the WD mass contribution in open and globular clusters. The cluster WD mass fraction is of importance for understanding the dynamical state and history of star clusters. It also bears an important connection to the WD mass fractions of the Galactic disk and halo. Current evidence indicates that the open clusters (e.g. von Hippel et al. 1996; Reid this volume) have essentially the same luminosity function (LF) as the solar neighborhood population. The case for the halo is less clear, despite the number of very good globular cluster LFs down to nearly 0.1 solar masses (e.g. Cool et al. 1996; Piotto, this volume), as the field halo LF is poorly known. For most clusters dynamical evolution should cause evaporation of the lowest mass members, biasing clusters to have flatter present-day mass functions (PDMFs) than the disk and halo field populations. Dynamical evolution should also allow cluster WDs to escape, though not in the same numbers as the much lower mass main sequence stars. The detailed connection between cluster PDMFs and the field IMF awaits elucidation from observations and the new combined N-body and stellar evolution models (Tout, this volume). Nevertheless, the WD mass fraction of clusters already provides an estimate for the WD mass fraction of the disk and halo field populations. A literature search to collect cluster WDs and a simple interpretive model follow. This is a work in progress and the full details of the literature search and the model will be published elsewhere.


2018 ◽  
Vol 618 ◽  
pp. A93 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Cantat-Gaudin ◽  
C. Jordi ◽  
A. Vallenari ◽  
A. Bragaglia ◽  
L. Balaguer-Núñez ◽  
...  

Context. Open clusters are convenient probes of the structure and history of the Galactic disk. They are also fundamental to stellar evolution studies. The second Gaia data release contains precise astrometry at the submilliarcsecond level and homogeneous photometry at the mmag level, that can be used to characterise a large number of clusters over the entire sky. Aims. In this study we aim to establish a list of members and derive mean parameters, in particular distances, for as many clusters as possible, making use of Gaia data alone. Methods. We compiled a list of thousands of known or putative clusters from the literature. We then applied an unsupervised membership assignment code, UPMASK, to the Gaia DR2 data contained within the fields of those clusters. Results. We obtained a list of members and cluster parameters for 1229 clusters. As expected, the youngest clusters are seen to be tightly distributed near the Galactic plane and to trace the spiral arms of the Milky Way, while older objects are more uniformly distributed, deviate further from the plane, and tend to be located at larger Galactocentric distances. Thanks to the quality of Gaia DR2 astrometry, the fully homogeneous parameters derived in this study are the most precise to date. Furthermore, we report on the serendipitous discovery of 60 new open clusters in the fields analysed during this study.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (S258) ◽  
pp. 153-160
Author(s):  
Angela Bragaglia

AbstractThe Bologna Open Cluster Chemical Evolution (BOCCE) project is a photometric and spectroscopic survey of open clusters, to be used as tracers of the Galactic disk properties and evolution. The clusters parameters (age, distance, reddening, metallicity, and detailed abundances) are derived in a precise and homogeneous way. This will contribute to a solid, reliable description of the disk: the clusters parameters will be used, for instance, to determine the metallicity distribution in the Galactic disk and how it has evolved with time. We have concentrated on old open clusters and we have presently in our hands data for about 40 open clusters; we have fully analyzed the photometric data for about one half of them and the spectra for one quarter of them.


2011 ◽  
pp. 215-228
Author(s):  
Siegfried Röser ◽  
Nina V. Kharchenko ◽  
Anatoly E. Piskunov ◽  
Elena Schilbach ◽  
Ralf-Dieter Scholz ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1977 ◽  
Vol 45 ◽  
pp. 149-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Peimbert

Abstract.Observational evidence related to the chemical composition across the disk of the Galaxy is reviewed. The H2density distribution derived for the Galaxy is poorly known, consequently it is still not possible to compare theoretical models of the chemical evolution of the Galaxy with the gaseous density distribution. The H2density distribution is particularly sensitive to the fraction of carbon atoms embedded in CO molecules and to the possible presence of a C/H abundance gradient.


2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (S266) ◽  
pp. 482-482
Author(s):  
Xiaoying Pang ◽  
Chenggang Shu

AbstractThe WEBDA database of open clusters (hereafter OCs) in the Galaxy contains 970 OCs, of which 911 have age determinations, 920 have distance measurements, and 911 have color-excess data. Base on the statistical analysis of global properties of open clusters, we investigate disk properties such as the height above the Galactic plane. We find that old open clusters (age ≥ 1 Gyr) are preferentially located far from the Galactic plane with 〈|z|〉~394.5 pc. They lie in the outer part of the Galactic disk. The young open clusters are distributed in the Galactic plane almost symmetrically with respect to the Sun, with a scale height perpendicular to the Galactic plane of 50.5 pc. The age distribution of open clusters can be fit approximately with a two-component exponential decay function: one component has an age scale factor of 225.2 Myr, and the other consists of longer-lived clusters with an age scale of 1.8 Gyr, which are smaller than those derived by Janes & Phelps (1994) of 200 Myr and 4 Gyr for the young and old OCs, respectively. As a consequence of completeness effects, the observed radial distribution of OCs with respect to Galactocentric distance does not follow the expected exponential profile. Instead, it falls off both for regions external to the solar circle and more sharply towards the Galactic Center, which is probably due to giant molecular cloud disruption in the center. We simulate the effects of completeness, assuming that the observed distribution of the number of OCs with a given number of stars above the background is representative of the intrinsic distribution of OCs throughout the Galaxy. Two simulation models are considered, in which the intrinsic number of the observable stars are distributed (i) assuming the actual positions of the OCs in the sample, and (ii) random selection of OC positions. As a result, we derive completeness-corrected radial distributions which agree with an exponential disk throughout the observed Galactocentric distance in the range of 5–15 kpc, with scale lengths in the range of 1.6–2.8 kpc.


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