New Rotation Periods in the Open Cluster NGC 1039 (M 34), and a Derivation of its Gyrochronology Age
David J. James, Sydney A. Barnes, Soren Meibom, Wesley Lockwood,, Stephen E. Levine, Constantine Deliyannis, Imants Platais, Aaron Steinhauer,, Briana K. Hurley

TL;DR
This study uses rotation periods of solar-type stars in the open cluster M 34 to determine its age through gyrochronology, providing a distance-independent age estimate that aligns with traditional methods.
Contribution
It presents a new set of 55 rotation periods for M 34 and demonstrates a methodology for deriving cluster age via gyrochronology using empirical rotation-colour-age relations.
Findings
Derived the cluster's gyrochronology age as 193 +/- 9 Myr.
Confirmed cluster membership for half of the periodic variables.
Found consistency between gyrochronology age and isochrone-based age estimates.
Abstract
Employing photometric rotation periods for solar-type stars in NGC 1039 [M 34], a young, nearby open cluster, we use its mass-dependent rotation period distribution to derive the cluster's age in a distance independent way, i.e., the so-called gyrochronology method. We present an analysis of 55 new rotation periods,using light curves derived from differential photometry, for solar type stars in M 34. We also exploit the results of a recently-completed, standardized, homogeneous BVIc CCD survey of the cluster in order to establish photometric cluster membership and assign B-V colours to each photometric variable. We describe a methodology for establishing the gyrochronology age for an ensemble of solar-type stars. Empirical relations between rotation period, photometric colour and stellar age (gyrochronology) are used to determine the age of M 34. Based on its position in a colour-period…
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