High Resolution Images of Orbital Motion in the Orion Trapezium Cluster with the LBT Adaptive Optics System
L.M. Close, A. Puglisi, J.R. Males, C. Arcidiacono, A. Skemer, J.C., Guerra, L. Busoni, G. Brusa, E. Pinna, D.L. Miller, A. Riccardi, D.W., McCarthy, M. Xompero, C. Kulesa, F. Quiros-Pacheco, J. Argomedo, J. Brynnel,, S. Esposito, F. Mannucci, K. Boutsia, L. Fini, D.J. Thompson

TL;DR
This study uses the LBT adaptive optics system to produce high-resolution infrared images of the Orion Trapezium Cluster, enabling precise measurements of stellar motions and revealing a potential ejection process influencing star formation.
Contribution
First high-resolution infrared imaging of Orion Trapezium with the LBT AO system, achieving unprecedented accuracy in measuring stellar proper motions over 15 years.
Findings
Detected orbital motions in theta1 Ori B2/B3 and theta1 Ori A1/A2 systems.
Identified a potential ejection of the low-mass member B4 from the mini-cluster.
Improved proper motion sensitivity by approximately seven times.
Abstract
The new 8.4m LBT adaptive secondary AO system, with its novel pyramid wavefront sensor, was used to produce very high Strehl (75% at 2.16 microns) near infrared narrowband (Br gamma: 2.16 microns and [FeII]: 1.64 microns) images of 47 young (~1 Myr) Orion Trapezium theta1 Ori cluster members. The inner ~41x53" of the cluster was imaged at spatial resolutions of ~0.050" (at 1.64 microns). A combination of high spatial resolution and high S/N yielded relative binary positions to ~0.5 mas accuracies. Including previous speckle data, we analyse a 15 year baseline of high-resolution observations of this cluster. We are now sensitive to relative proper motions of just ~0.3 mas/yr (0.6 km/s at 450 pc) this is a ~7x improvement in orbital velocity accuracy compared to previous efforts. We now detect clear orbital motions in the theta1 Ori B2/B3 system of 4.9+/-0.3 km/s and 7.2+/-0.8 km/s in the…
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