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arxiv: astro-ph/0404223 · v1 · submitted 2004-04-11 · 🌌 astro-ph

Discovery of three optical open clusters in the Galaxy

classification 🌌 astro-ph
keywords clustersdegreesmassmassescluster3solardistanceopen
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We report the discovery of three optical open clusters in the Milky Way. Two clusters are in Scutum (Cluster1 at l=18.44 degrees and b=-0.42 degrees, and Cluster2 at l=19.60 degrees and b=-1.02 degrees), thus projected not far from the Galactic center direction, and the other is in Canis Major (Cluster3 at l=235.61 degrees and b=-4.10 degrees), near the anti-center direction. Cluster3 is less populous than Clusters 1 and 2, but presents evidence of being a physical system. The objects were found optically by inspecting maps obtained from the Guide Star Catalogue and images from the Digitized Sky Survey. No previous identification of cluster has been reported in each area so far. The analysis was carried out with 2MASS photometry in J and H. For Cluster1 we derive an age of 25 Myr, a reddening E(B-V)=2.18 and a distance from the Sun 1.64kpc; for Cluster2, age of 500Myr, E(B-V)=0.91 and distance 2.19kpc; finally for Cluster3, age 32-100Myr, E(B-V)=0.94 and distance of 3.93kpc. Luminosity and mass functions are derived for Clusters1 and 2 which, in turn, allowed us to estimate their observed masses as 147 and 89 solar masses, respectively. Estimated total masses, by extrapolating the mass functions to 0.08 solar mass, amount to 382 and 614 solar masses, for the two clusters. Cluster3 has an observed mass of 55 solar masses. The present results indicate that further searches in the optical might still reveal new open clusters, and more so in infrared bands.

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