Quantifying the contamination by old main-sequence stars in young moving groups: the case of the Local Association
J. Lopez-Santiago, G. Micela, D. Montes

TL;DR
This study assesses the level of contamination by old main-sequence stars in young stellar moving groups, especially the Local Association, using multi-wavelength data to distinguish true young members from older interlopers.
Contribution
It demonstrates a method combining photometric, spectroscopic, and X-ray data to effectively separate young stars from old field stars in moving groups, quantifying contamination levels.
Findings
The Local Association has about 30% contamination by old stars.
X-ray emission helps distinguish stars younger than 200 Myr from older stars.
Combining multiple data types is essential for accurate membership classification.
Abstract
The associations and moving groups of young stars are excellent laboratories for investigating stellar formation in the solar neighborhood. Previous results have confirmed that a non-negligible fraction of old main-sequence stars is present in the lists of possible members of young stellar kinematic groups. A detailed study of the properties of these samples is needed to separate the young stars from old main-sequence stars with similar space motion, and identify the origin of these structures. We used stars possible members of the young (~ 10 - 650 Myr) moving groups from the literature. To determine the age of the stars, we used several suitable age indicators for young main sequence stars, i.e., X-ray fluxes and other photometric data. We also used spectroscopic data, in particular the equivalent width of the lithium line Li I and Halpha, to constrain the range of ages of the stars.…
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