IN-SYNC III: The dynamical state of IC 348 - A super-virial velocity dispersion and a puzzling sign of convergence
Michiel Cottaar, Kevin R. Covey, Jonathan B. Foster, Michael, R. Meyer, Jonathan C. Tan, David L. Nidever, S. Drew Chojnowski and, Nicola da Rio, Kevin M. Flaherty, Peter M. Frinchaboy, Steve, Majewski, Michael F. Skrutskie, John C. Wilson, Gail Zasowski

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar velocities in IC 348, revealing a super-virial state and potential line-of-sight convergence, providing insights into the cluster's dynamical evolution and initial conditions.
Contribution
It presents the first evidence of line-of-sight convergence in a star cluster and characterizes the velocity distribution, including the super-virial state of IC 348.
Findings
Velocity dispersion of 0.72 km/s suggests a supervirial state.
Evidence of line-of-sight convergence based on velocity-extinction correlation.
No dependence of velocity dispersion on stellar mass or position.
Abstract
Most field stars will have encountered the highest stellar density and hence the largest number of interactions in their birth environment. Yet the stellar dynamics during this crucial phase are poorly understood. Here we analyze the radial velocities measured for 152 out of 380 observed stars in the 2-6 Myr old star cluster IC 348 as part of the SDSS-III APOGEE. The radial velocity distribution of these stars is fitted with one or two Gaussians, convolved with the measurement uncertainties including binary orbital motions. Including a second Gaussian improves the fit; the high-velocity outliers that are best fit by this second component may either (1) be contaminants from the nearby Perseus OB2 association, (2) be a halo of ejected or dispersing stars from IC 348, or (3) reflect that IC 348 has not relaxed to a Gaussian velocity distribution. We measure a velocity dispersion for IC 348…
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