Solving the distance discrepancy for the open cluster NGC 2453. The planetary nebula NGC 2452 is not a cluster member
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 17:54 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Radial velocity and Gaia distance data show the planetary nebula NGC 2452 is a foreground object unrelated to the open cluster NGC 2453.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The open cluster NGC 2453 lies at 4.7 ± 0.2 kpc with a radial velocity of 78 ± 3 km s^{-1} and an age of 40-50 Myr, while the planetary nebula NGC 2452 has a radial velocity of 62 ± 2 km s^{-1} and is therefore a foreground object in the same line of sight rather than a cluster member.
What carries the argument
Radial velocity measurements of 11 potential members combined with Gaia DR2 parallaxes and UBVRI photometry for isochrone fitting to determine cluster parameters and test membership.
If this is right
- The cluster parameters can be used without contamination from the unrelated nebula.
- Membership lists for NGC 2453 should exclude NGC 2452.
- The previously reported distance discrepancy between the cluster and nebula is resolved in favor of non-membership.
- Isochrone-derived age of 40-50 Myr is now tied to a firmly measured distance.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same velocity-plus-Gaia approach could test other claimed planetary-nebula memberships in open clusters.
- Some fraction of previously accepted cluster planetary nebulae may turn out to be line-of-sight coincidences once Gaia data are applied.
- Updated cluster catalogs should flag NGC 2453 as having no associated planetary nebula.
Load-bearing premise
The 11 selected stars are true cluster members whose radial velocities accurately reflect the cluster's overall motion without major contamination or error.
What would settle it
A precise distance measurement for NGC 2452 that equals 4.7 kpc would falsify the conclusion that the nebula is not a member.
Figures
read the original abstract
The open cluster (OC) NGC 2453 is of particular importance since it has been considered to host the planetary nebula (PN) NGC 2452, however their distances and radial velocities are strongly contested. In order to obtain a complete picture of the fundamental parameters of the OC NGC 2453, 11 potential members were studied. The results allowed us to resolve the PN NGC 2452 membership debate. Radial velocities for the 11 stars in NGC 2453 and the PN were measured and matched with Gaia data release 2 (DR2) to estimate the cluster distance. In addition, we used deep multi-band UBVRI photometry to get fundamental parameters of the cluster via isochrone fitting on the most likely cluster members, reducing inaccuracies due to field stars.The distance of the OC NGC 2453 (4.7 $\pm$ 0.2 kpc) was obtained with an independent method solving the discrepancy reported in the literature. This result is in good agreement with an isochrone fitting of 40-50 Myr. On the other hand, the radial velocity of NGC 2453 ($78 \pm 3$ km s$^{-1}$) disagrees with the velocity of NGC2452 ($62 \pm 2$ km s$^{-1}$). Our results show that the PN is a foreground object in the line of sight. Due to the discrepancies found in the parameters studied, we conclude that the PN NGC 2452 is not a member of the OC NGC 2453.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript claims that new radial velocity measurements for 11 potential members of open cluster NGC 2453 and for PN NGC 2452, combined with Gaia DR2 astrometry and UBVRI photometry for isochrone fitting, yield a cluster distance of 4.7 ± 0.2 kpc and systemic RV of 78 ± 3 km s^{-1}. The PN RV of 62 ± 2 km s^{-1} differs significantly, leading to the conclusion that NGC 2452 is a foreground object and not a cluster member, thereby resolving prior distance and membership discrepancies.
Significance. If the 11-star sample is shown to be uncontaminated, the work would provide an independent Gaia-based distance and RV benchmark that settles a contested association in the literature. The combination of spectroscopy, astrometry, and photometry follows standard practice for cluster parameter determination and could serve as a template for similar PN-OC membership tests.
major comments (2)
- [Sample selection / observations] The description of the stellar sample (abstract and § on observations) provides no explicit membership criteria such as Gaia DR2 proper-motion clipping, parallax consistency thresholds, or probability cuts. Because the cluster RV mean of 78 ± 3 km s^{-1} is derived solely from these 11 stars and is the decisive datum separating the PN, lack of documented selection directly undermines in the 16 km s^{-1} offset.
- [Isochrone fitting / results] The isochrone fit is performed on 'most likely cluster members' drawn from the same 11-star set used for the RV mean. No quantitative test (e.g., jackknife or contamination simulation) is reported to show how field interlopers would shift either the RV or the fitted distance/age, even though the non-membership claim rests on both quantities being reliable.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract / distance determination] The abstract states the distance was 'obtained with an independent method' but does not clarify whether the Gaia DR2 value is a simple parallax inversion or involves a more involved Bayesian or photometric correction; this should be stated explicitly in the methods.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive comments, which highlight areas where our methods can be clarified. We address each major comment below and will revise the manuscript to improve transparency.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Sample selection / observations] The description of the stellar sample (abstract and § on observations) provides no explicit membership criteria such as Gaia DR2 proper-motion clipping, parallax consistency thresholds, or probability cuts. Because the cluster RV mean of 78 ± 3 km s^{-1} is derived solely from these 11 stars and is the decisive datum separating the PN, lack of documented selection directly undermines in the 16 km s^{-1} offset.
Authors: We agree that explicit membership criteria were not detailed in the abstract or observations section. The 11 stars were identified as potential members using a combination of positional coincidence, Gaia DR2 proper motions and parallaxes consistent with the cluster, and photometric placement on the expected main sequence. We will revise the observations section to document the specific selection steps and thresholds applied. revision: yes
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Referee: [Isochrone fitting / results] The isochrone fit is performed on 'most likely cluster members' drawn from the same 11-star set used for the RV mean. No quantitative test (e.g., jackknife or contamination simulation) is reported to show how field interlopers would shift either the RV or the fitted distance/age, even though the non-membership claim rests on both quantities being reliable.
Authors: The referee is correct that no quantitative robustness test against contamination is reported. The conclusions rely on the internal consistency between the RV offset, the Gaia-based distance, and the independent isochrone age. We will add a short discussion of possible field-star effects and, if feasible with the existing data, a simple contamination estimate in the revised version. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; results from new RV measurements, Gaia DR2 parallaxes, and photometry.
full rationale
The derivation uses direct new spectroscopic radial velocities for the 11 stars and PN, Gaia DR2 data for distance, and independent UBVRI photometry for isochrone fitting. The non-membership conclusion follows from the observed RV offset and distance consistency with the isochrone age. No self-definitional relations, fitted inputs renamed as predictions, or load-bearing self-citations appear in the abstract or described chain. The selection of 'potential members' and 'most likely cluster members' relies on external data sources rather than reducing to prior outputs of the same analysis.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- cluster distance =
4.7 kpc
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Gaia DR2 parallaxes provide reliable distance estimates for stars in this cluster
- domain assumption Isochrone models accurately represent the stellar population for age determination
Reference graph
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