ArXiv TLDR

The high-altitude, inner-disc, and chemically peculiar open cluster UBC 1052

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2604.11291

Judit Donada, Laia Casamiquela, Friedrich Anders, Lola Balaguer-Núñez, Sergi Blanco-Cuaresma + 6 more

astro-ph.GAastro-ph.SR

TLDR

Spectroscopic analysis of UBC 1052, an old, high-altitude, inner-disc open cluster, reveals unique chemical patterns and suggests inward migration.

Key contributions

  • Performed high-resolution spectroscopy of UBC 1052, the oldest and highest-Z inner-disc open cluster.
  • Derived precise age (2.25 Gyr), distance (3.11 kpc), and radial velocity for the cluster.
  • Found a slightly super-solar [Fe/H] (0.05 dex) suggesting UBC 1052 is an inward-migrated OC.
  • Identified unique chemical abundance patterns for 23 elements, making it ideal for chemical-tagging.

Why it matters

This study provides the first high-resolution spectroscopic analysis of UBC 1052, a rare and intriguing open cluster. Its peculiar chemical signature and low [Fe/H] for its location offer crucial insights into galactic dynamics and stellar migration, making it a prime target for future chemical-tagging studies.

Original Abstract

Out of all the discovered open clusters (OCs) that are located in the inner part of the Galaxy, only a small fraction has been observed with high-resolution spectroscopy. An intriguing population of inner-disc OCs at relatively high altitudes ($Z$) from the Galactic plane remains poorly studied. There are few reliable detections of such OCs, and their occurrence rate, dynamical origin and survival mechanism remain uncertain. We perform a detailed spectroscopic analysis of UBC 1052, located at a cylindrical galactocentric radius $R_{GC} = 6.1$ kpc and $Z = 340$ pc, which stands out as the oldest and highest-|$Z$| inner-disc OC studied at high resolution to date. We used FLAMES/VLT to acquire high signal-to-noise ratio UVES spectra of four red clump (RC) members ($G\sim14$ mag). From them we derived high-precision radial velocities ($v_{r}$) and local thermodynamic equilibrium chemical abundances for 23 elements through a strict line-by-line differential analysis, achieving a median precision in [X/H] of $\simeq0.06$ dex for each star. The four RC stars have fully compatible chemical abundances, with [X/H] dispersions among them <$0.03$ dex for 20 elements. We also acquired GIRAFFE spectra of other candidate members and derived their $v_{r}$. We find that UBC 1052 has an age of $2.25\pm0.25$ Gyr, a distance of $3.11\pm0.07$ kpc, an extinction $A_{V} =1.23$ mag, a mean radial velocity of $34.0\pm0.6$ $km$ ${s}^{-1}$, and a slightly super-solar [Fe/H] = $0.05\pm0.01$ dex. Such relatively low [Fe/H] at its $R_{GC}$ suggests that UBC 1052 is a rare candidate for an inward-migrated OC in the inner disc. Its detailed abundance pattern (e.g. [Ba/Zr] and [Nd/Y]) shows some interesting features that appear to be unique in the current census of OCs studied at high resolution, making it an interesting object for potential strong chemical-tagging searches for already dispersed member stars. [Abridged]

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