The complex stellar populations in the lines of sight to open clusters in the third Galactic quadrant
Giovanni Carraro (ESO, Chile), Anton F. Seleznev (Ural Federal, University, Ekaterinburg, Russia), Gustavo L. Baume (Universidad de La Plata,, Argentina), David G. Turner (St. Mary University, Halifax, Canada)

TL;DR
This study analyzes stellar populations in five fields in the third Galactic quadrant, revealing complex structures consistent with a warped and flared Galactic disk, and challenges some existing Galactic models.
Contribution
It provides new photometric data and analysis of previously understudied clusters, confirming some and reclassifying others, without relying on Galactic models.
Findings
ESO489SC01 is not a real cluster.
Haffner 22 is an overlooked cluster about 2.5 Gyr old.
Background populations trace the Norma-Cygnus arm, challenging disk cut-off models.
Abstract
Multi-color photometry of the stellar populations in five fields in the third Galactic quadrant centred on the clusters NGC 2215, NGC 2354, Haffner 22, Ruprecht 11, and ESO489SC01 is interpreted in terms of a warped and flared Galactic disk, without resort to an external entity such as the popular Monoceros or Canis Major overdensities. Except for NGC 2215, the clusters are poorly or unstudied previously. The data generate basic parameters for each cluster, including the distribution of stars along the line of sight. We use star counts and photometric analysis, without recourse to Galactic-model-based predictions or interpretations, and confirms earlier results for NGC 2215 and NGC 2354. ESO489SC01 is not a real cluster, while Haffner~22 is an overlooked cluster aged about 2.5 Gyr. Conclusions for Ruprecht~11 are preliminary, evidence for a cluster being marginal. Fields surrounding the…
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