ArXiv TLDR

Stellar rotation and binaries in open clusters with Gaia DR3

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2605.05313

Elena Pancino, Elisabetta Reggiani, Silvia Marinoni, Paola M. Marrese, Deimer Alvarez Garay + 12 more

astro-ph.SRastro-ph.GA

TLDR

This paper explores stellar rotation and binaries in open clusters using Gaia DR3 data, identifying new blue stragglers and characterizing eMSTOs.

Key contributions

  • Presents the first large-scale statistical exploration of stellar rotation in open clusters using Gaia DR3.
  • Identifies hundreds of new blue stragglers and increases the number of clusters with extended main sequence turnoffs (eMSTO) to 96.
  • Discovers that most open clusters more massive than 10^3 solar masses display an eMSTO.
  • Provides a new parametrization of blue straggler numbers based on cluster mass and age.

Why it matters

This study provides the first comprehensive statistical analysis of stellar rotation and binaries in open clusters, leveraging Gaia DR3 data. Its extensive catalogue and novel findings on blue stragglers and eMSTOs offer a crucial foundation for understanding stellar evolution and interactions.

Original Abstract

Stellar rotation is a fundamental ingredient in shaping the evolution of stars and it can also be used to trace past stellar interactions. Yet, systematic studies of stellar rotation in large samples of stars belonging to different populations have only recently been made possible, thanks to spectroscopic surveys. We profit from the catalogue of rotational broadening and rotation periods released with Gaia DR3. We focus on open clusters to study the rotational behaviour of several interesting populations including, among others, blue stragglers and extended main sequence turnoffs (eMSTO). We use literature lists of almost a million member stars in several thousand open clusters in the Milky Way. We collect properties of stars and clusters from large surveys, including Gaia, and from various literature sources. We include a comprehensive collection of known variables and binary stars from various databases. We manually select (exotic) stellar populations from the color-magnitude diagrams of individual clusters and study their rotational properties. Our catalogue contains more than 44 000 rotationally characterised stars, almost 57 000 variables (excluding binaries) and more than 22 000 binary stars. We find several interesting results, including a few hundred new blue stragglers, several fast rotating red giants, and we increase the number of clusters with an eMSTO to 96. We discover that most clusters more massive than $10^3$ $M_{\odot}$ display an eMSTO. We present a new parametrization of the number of blue stragglers as a function of cluster mass and age. We find that the percentage of binary stars in the equal-mass binary sequence and in the main sequence are similar. We present the first large-scale statistical exploration of stellar rotation in open clusters, which already yielded new interesting results and which can be used as the basis for several detailed follow-up studies.

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