The nature of the young and low-mass open clusters Pismis5, vdB80, NGC1931 and BDSB96
Abstract
We investigate the nature of 4 young and low-mass open clusters (OCs) located in the 2nd and 3rd quadrants with near-IR 2MASS photometry (errors <0.1 mag). After field decontamination, the colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) display similar morphologies: a poorly-populated main sequence (MS) and a dominant fraction of pre-MS (PMS) stars somewhat affected by differential reddening. Pismis 5, vdB 80 and BDSB 96 have MS ages within 54 Myr, while the MS of NGC 1931 is 103 Myr old. However, non-instantaneous star formation is implied by the wider (20 Myr) PMS age spread. The cluster masses derived from MS + PMS stars are low, within 60-180 , with mass functions (MFs) significantly flatter than Salpeter's initial mass function (IMF). Distances from the Sun are within 1.0-2.4 kpc, and the visual absorptions are in the range =1.0-2.0. From the stellar radial density profiles (RDPs), we find that they are small (0.48 pc, 5.8 pc), especially Pismis 5 with ≈0.2 pc and ≈1.8 pc. Except for the irregular and cuspy inner regions of NGC 1931 and Pismis 5, the stellar RDPs follow a King-like profile. At 10 Myr, central cusps - which in old clusters appear to be related to advanced dynamical evolution - are probably associated with a star-formation and/or molecular cloud fragmentation effect. Despite the flat MFs, vdB 80 and BDSB 96 appear to be typical young, low-mass OCs. NGC 1931 and especially Pismis 5, with irregular RDPs, low cluster mass and flat MFs, do not appear to be in dynamical equilibrium. Both may be evolving into OB associations and/or doomed to dissolution in a few 107 yr.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.