A phylogenetic approach to chemical tagging. Reassembling open cluster stars
Sergi Blanco-Cuaresma, Didier Fraix-Burnet

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that phylogenetic methods combined with differential chemical abundance analysis, especially using open cluster references, can effectively reconstruct stellar groupings and trace the Galaxy's history.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel application of phylogenetic techniques to stellar chemical data, improving cluster reconstruction by using open cluster references and selecting key chemical tracers.
Findings
Successful reconstruction of open clusters using differential abundances
Identification of eight chemical elements as effective tracers
Phylogenetic approaches outperform traditional clustering methods
Abstract
Context. The chemical tagging technique is a promising approach to reconstruct the history of the Galaxy by only using stellar chemical abundances. Different studies have undertaken this analysis and they raised several challenges. Aims. Using a sample of open clusters stars, we wish to address two issues: minimize chemical abundance differences which origin is linked to the evolutionary stage of the stars and not their original composition; evaluate a phylogenetic approach to group stars based on their chemical composition. Methods. We derived differential chemical abundances for 207 stars (belonging to 34 open clusters) using the Sun as reference star (classical approach) and a dwarf plus a giant star from the open cluster M67 as reference (new approach). These abundances were then used to perform two phylogenetic analyses, cladistics (Maximum Parsimony) and Neighbour-Joining,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Cephalopods and Marine Biology · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
