2018MNRAS.473.4612K


Query : 2018MNRAS.473.4612K

2018MNRAS.473.4612K - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 473, 4612-4633 (2018/February-1)

The GALAH survey: chemical tagging of star clusters and new members in the Pleiades.

KOS J., BLAND-HAWTHORN J., FREEMAN K., BUDER S., TRAVEN G., DE SILVA G.M., SHARMA S., ASPLUND M., DUONG L., LIN J., LIND K., MARTELL S., SIMPSON J.D., STELLO D., ZUCKER D.B., ZWITTER T., ANGUIANO B., DA COSTA G., D'ORAZI V., HORNER J., KAFLE P.R., LEWIS G., MUNARI U., NATAF D.M., NESS M., REID W., SCHLESINGER K., TING Y.-S. and WYSE R.

Abstract (from CDS):

The technique of chemical tagging uses the elemental abundances of stellar atmospheres to 'reconstruct' chemically homogeneous star clusters that have long since dispersed. The GALAH spectroscopic survey - which aims to observe one million stars using the Anglo-Australian Telescope - allows us to measure up to 30 elements or dimensions in the stellar chemical abundance space, many of which are not independent. How to find clustering reliably in a noisy high-dimensional space is a difficult problem that remains largely unsolved. Here, we explore t-distributed stochastic neighbour embedding (t-SNE) - which identifies an optimal mapping of a high-dimensional space into fewer dimensions - whilst conserving the original clustering information. Typically, the projection is made to a 2D space to aid recognition of clusters by eye. We show that this method is a reliable tool for chemical tagging because it can: (i) resolve clustering in chemical space alone, (ii) recover known open and globular clusters with high efficiency and low contamination, and (iii) relate field stars to known clusters. t-SNE also provides a useful visualization of a high-dimensional space. We demonstrate the method on a data set of 13 abundances measured in the spectra of 187 000 stars by the GALAH survey. We recover seven of the nine observed clusters (six globular and three open clusters) in chemical space with minimal contamination from field stars and low numbers of outliers. With chemical tagging, we also identify two Pleiades supercluster members (which we confirm kinematically), one as far as 6° - one tidal radius away from the cluster centre.

Abstract Copyright: © 2017 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): methods: data analysis - stars: abundances - open clusters and associations: general - open clusters and associations: individual: Pleiades

Simbad objects: 14

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Number of rows : 14
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 NGC 104 GlC 00 24 05.359 -72 04 53.20     4.09     ~ 3917 0
2 NGC 288 GlC 00 52 45.24 -26 34 57.4   10 8.13     ~ 1042 0
3 NGC 362 GlC 01 03 14.26 -70 50 55.6     6.58     ~ 1085 0
4 Cl Melotte 22 OpC 03 46 24.2 +24 06 50           ~ 3435 0
5 Cl Melotte 25 OpC 04 29 47.3 +16 56 53           ~ 3074 0
6 NGC 1851 GlC 05 14 06.76 -40 02 47.6           ~ 1430 0
7 NGC 2243 OpC 06 29 34.8 -31 16 55   10.12 9.4     ~ 269 0
8 NGC 2516 OpC 07 58 06.5 -60 48 00           ~ 713 0
9 IC 2391 OpC 08 41 10.1 -52 59 28           ~ 822 0
10 NGC 2682 OpC 08 51 23.0 +11 48 50           ~ 2342 0
11 NGC 5139 GlC 13 26 47.28 -47 28 46.1           ~ 3427 0
12 NGC 6362 GlC 17 31 54.99 -67 02 54.0           ~ 585 0
13 M 30 GlC 21 40 22.12 -23 10 47.5     7.10     ~ 1049 0
14 NAME Argus Association As* ~ ~           ~ 228 0

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