Astrometric radial velocities. III. Hipparcos measurements of nearby star clusters and associations

Madsen, Søren; Dravins, Dainis; Lindegren, Lennart (2002). Astrometric radial velocities. III. Hipparcos measurements of nearby star clusters and associations. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 381,, 446 - 463
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Authors:
Madsen, Søren ; Dravins, Dainis ; Lindegren, Lennart
Department:
Lund Observatory - Has been reorganised
Abstract:
Radial motions of stars in nearby moving clusters are determined fromaccurate proper motions and trigonometric parallaxes, without any use ofspectroscopy. Assuming that cluster members share the same velocityvector (apart from a random dispersion), we apply a maximum-likelihoodmethod on astrometric data from Hipparcos to compute radial and spacevelocities (and their dispersions) in the Ursa Major, Hyades, ComaBerenices, Pleiades, and Praesepe clusters, and for theScorpius-Centaurus, alpha Persei, and ``HIP 98321'' associations. Theradial motion of the Hyades cluster is determined to within 0.4 kms<SUP>-1</SUP> (standard error), and that of its individual stars towithin 0.6 km s<SUP>-1</SUP>. For other clusters, Hipparcos data yieldastrometric radial velocities with typical accuracies of a few kms<SUP>-1</SUP>. A comparison of these astrometric values withspectroscopic radial velocities in the literature shows a good generalagreement and, in the case of the best-determined Hyades cluster, alsopermits searches for subtle astrophysical differences, such as evidencefor enhanced convective blueshifts of F-dwarf spectra, and decreasedgravitational redshifts in giants. Similar comparisons for the ScorpiusOB2 complex indicate some expansion of its associations, albeit slowerthan expected from their ages. As a by-product from the radial-velocitysolutions, kinematically improved parallaxes for individual stars areobtained, enabling Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams with unprecedentedaccuracy in luminosity. For the Hyades (parallax accuracy 0.3 mas), itsmain sequence resembles a thin line, possibly with wiggles in it.Although this main sequence has underpopulated regions at certaincolours (previously suggested to be ``Böhm-Vitense gaps''), suchare not visible for other clusters, and are probably spurious. Futurespace astrometry missions carry a great potential for absoluteradial-velocity determinations, insensitive to the complexities ofstellar spectra. Based on observations by the ESA Hipparcos satellite.Extended versions of Tables

ef{tab1} and

ef{tab2} are available inelectronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr(130.79.125.8) or viahttp://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/381/446
Keywords:
METHODS: DATA ANALYSIS ; TECHNIQUES: RADIAL VELOCITIES ; ASTROMETRY ; OPEN CLUSTERS AND ASSOCIATIONS: GENERAL ; STARS: DISTANCES - STARS: KINEMATICS
ISSN:
0004-6361
LUP-ID:
d3cf488f-8bb3-404d-9525-dfb4bcbe0cbe | Link: https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/d3cf488f-8bb3-404d-9525-dfb4bcbe0cbe | Statistics

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