Bar-induced deflection of open cluster tidal tails

Abstract

We present a systematic study of how the Galactic bar affects the orientation of tidal tails of open clusters and assess the power of tail morphology to constrain the bar's pattern speed. Using test-particle simulations, we follow the evolution of 1450 observed open clusters from the Hunt & Reffert (2024) catalogue in an axisymmetric reference potential and in eight barred potentials with pattern speeds ranging from Ωb = 20 km/s/kpc to Ωb = 55 km/s/kpc. We quantify the bar effect through the deflection angle -- the rotation of the tail orientation in the barred model relative to the axisymmetric case. The deflection angle varies systematically with bar pattern speed and cluster guiding radius. The largest deflections occur for clusters near the outer Lindblad resonance (OLR), with the sign of the angle set by the orientation of the orbit's pericentre relative to the bar's major axis. For each cluster we measure the distance from the centre beyond which different bar models produce distinguishable tail orientations, and classify each cluster as bar-sensitive or bar-insensitive based on its maximum absolute deflection across the bar models. Comparing with observed tidal tails from the literature, we find that the extended tails of NGC 2632 and the Hyades disfavour moderate pattern speeds. We provide a catalogue of deflection angles, minimal tail extents, and bar-sensitivity flags to guide future observational searches and the re-assessment of existing tidal tail catalogues.

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