The open cluster Pismis 11 and the very luminous blue supergiant HD 80077
Amparo Marco, Ignacio Negueruela

TL;DR
This study confirms the membership of the luminous blue supergiant HD 80077 in the open cluster Pismis 11, determines its distance at 3.6 kpc, and identifies a new nearby cluster, Alicante 5, suggesting a small stellar association.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of Pismis 11 and HD 80077, establishing their properties and discovering a new cluster, Alicante 5, in the vicinity.
Findings
HD 80077 is likely a cluster member with M_bol<-10.5.
Distance to Pismis 11 and Alicante 5 is approximately 3.6 kpc.
HD 80077 is not a runaway star and may be one of the brightest in the Galaxy.
Abstract
(Abridged) The very luminous blue supergiant HD 80077 has been claimed to be a member of the young open cluster Pismis 11, and hence a hypergiant. We obtained UBVRI photometry of the cluster field and low-resolution spectroscopy of a number of putative members. We derive spectral types from the spectra and determine that the reddening in this direction is standard. We then carry out a careful photometric analysis that allows us to determine individual reddening values, deriving unreddened parameters that are used for the main sequence fit. We identify 43 likely members of Pismis 11. We study the variation of extinction across the face of the cluster and find some dispersion, with a trend to higher values in the immediate neighbourhood of HD 80077. We estimate a distance of 3.6 kpc for the cluster. If HD 80077 is a member, it has M_bol<-10.5 and it is one of the three visually brightest…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
