Stellar Radial Velocities in the Old Open Cluster M67 (NGC 2682) I. Memberships, Binaries, and Kinematics
Aaron M. Geller, David W. Latham, Robert D. Mathieu

TL;DR
This study provides extensive radial velocity data for stars in the old open cluster M67, revealing its kinematic properties, binary star prevalence, mass segregation, and detailed membership analysis over a 40-year observational span.
Contribution
It offers the first comprehensive, long-term radial velocity survey of M67, including precise measurements, membership probabilities, and insights into binary populations and cluster dynamics.
Findings
M67 has a mean radial velocity of +33.64 km/s.
The cluster's binary fraction among members is at least 80%.
The derived velocity dispersion is 0.59 km/s, leading to a virial mass estimate of about 2100 solar masses.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present results from 13776 radial-velocity (RV) measurements of 1278 candidate members of the old (4 Gyr) open cluster M67 (NGC 2682). The measurements are the results of a long-term survey that includes data from seven telescopes with observations for some stars spanning over 40 years. For narrow-lined stars, RVs are measured with precisions ranging from about 0.1 to 0.8 km/s. The combined stellar sample reaches from the brightest giants in the cluster down to about 4 magnitudes below the main-sequence turnoff (V = 16.5), covering a mass range of about 1.34 MSun to 0.76 MSun. Spatially, the sample extends to a radius of 30 arcmin (7.4 pc in projection at a distant of 850 pc or 6-7 core radii). We find M67 to have a mean RV of +33.64 km/s (with an internal precision of +/- 0.03 km/s). For stars with >=3 measurements, we derive RV membership probabilities and identify RV…
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