Characterizing a cluster's dynamic state using a single epoch of radial velocities
Michiel Cottaar, Michael R. Meyer, Richard J. Parker

TL;DR
This paper presents a maximum likelihood method to determine a star cluster's intrinsic velocity distribution from a single epoch of radial velocity data, effectively accounting for binary orbital motions even at very low velocity dispersions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel statistical approach that accurately characterizes a cluster's velocity distribution from limited data, considering binary star effects.
Findings
Method accurately recovers velocity dispersion of 0.5 km/s with a single epoch.
Uncertainty in parameters mainly due to statistical errors, weakly dependent on binary assumptions.
Monte Carlo simulations guide sample size requirements for desired accuracy.
Abstract
Radial velocity measurements can be used to constrain the dynamical state of a stellar cluster. However, for clusters with velocity dispersions smaller than a few km/s the observed radial velocity distribution tends to be dominated by the orbital motions of binaries rather than the stellar motions through the potential well of the cluster. Our goal is to characterize the intrinsic velocity distribution of a cluster from a single epoch of radial velocity data, even for a cluster with a velocity dispersion of a fraction of a km/s, using a maximum likelihood procedure. Assuming a period, mass ratio, and eccentricity distribution for the binaries in the observed cluster this procedure fits a dynamical model describing the velocity distribution for the single stars and center of masses of the binaries, simultaneously with the radial velocities caused by binary orbital motions, using all the…
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