# Young open cluster IC 4996 and its vicinity: multicolor photometry and   Gaia DR2 astrometry

**Authors:** V. Strai\v{z}ys (1), R. P. Boyle (2), K. Mila\v{s}ius (1), K., \v{C}ernis (1), M. Macijauskas (1), U. Munari (3), R. Janusz (4), J., Zdanavi\v{c}ius (1), K. Zdanavi\v{c}ius (1), M. Maskoli\=unas (1), S., Raudeli\=unas (1), A. Kazlauskas (1) ((1) Institute of Theoretical Physics, and Astronomy, Vilnius University, Lithuania, (2) Vatican Observatory, Research Group, Steward Observatory, USA, (3) INAF Astronomical Observatory, of Padova, Asiago, Italy, (4) Vatican Observatory, Vatican City State)

arXiv: 1901.11375 · 2019-02-27

## TL;DR

This study combines multicolor photometry and Gaia DR2 astrometry to analyze the young open cluster IC 4996, determining its parameters, member stars, and relation to nearby stellar associations.

## Contribution

It provides new parameters for IC 4996, including distance, age, and extinction, and clarifies its relation to Cyg OB1 and Cyg OB3 using Gaia data.

## Key findings

- Cluster distance is 1915 ± 110 pc.
- Age of the cluster is 8-10 Myr.
- IC 4996 is likely related to Cyg OB3, not Cyg OB1.

## Abstract

The open cluster IC 4996 in Cygnus and its vicinity are investigated by applying a two-dimensional photometric classification of stars measured in the Vilnius seven-color photometric system. Cluster members are identified by applying distances based on the Gaia DR2 parallaxes and the point vector diagram of the Gaia DR2 proper motions. For some B-type stars, spectroscopic MK types are also obtained from the Asiago spectra and collected from the literature. New parameters of the cluster are derived. The interstellar extinction $A_V$ covers a wide range of values, from 1.3 to 2.4 mag; the mean value in the central part of the cluster is 1.8 mag. The cluster distance is 1915 $\pm$ 110 pc, and its age is within 8-10 Myr. The cluster exhibits a long sequence from early-B to G stars, where stars cooler than B8 are in the pre-main-sequence stage. The plot of extinction versus distance shows a steep rise of $A_V$ up to 1.6 mag at 700-800 pc, which is probably related to dust clouds at the edge of the Great Cygnus Rift. The next increase in extinction by an additional 0.8 mag at $d$ $\geq$ 1.7 kpc is probably related to the associations Cyg OB1 and Cyg OB3. The cluster IC 4996 does not belong to the Cyg OB1 association, which is located closer to the Sun, at 1682 $\pm$ 116 pc. It seems likely that the cluster and the surrounding O-B stars have a common origin with the nearby association Cyg OB3 since Gaia data show that these stellar groups are located at a similar distance.

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11375/full.md

## References

43 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11375/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1901.11375