# Discovery of Tidal Tails in Disrupting Open Clusters: Coma Berenices and   a Neighbor Stellar Group

**Authors:** Shih-Yun Tang, Xiaoying Pang, Zhen Yuan, W. P. Chen, Jongsuk Hong,, Bertrand Goldman, Andreas Just, Bekdaulet Shukirgaliyev, Chien-Cheng Lin

arXiv: 1902.01404 · 2019-05-29

## TL;DR

This study discovers and characterizes tidal tails around the Coma Berenices star cluster using Gaia data, revealing its ongoing disruption and an adjacent stellar group, with detailed analysis of member properties and kinematics.

## Contribution

First detection of tidal tails around Coma Berenices and identification of a nearby disrupted stellar group using Gaia DR2 data and clustering analysis.

## Key findings

- Tidal tails extend ~50 pc from the cluster.
- Cluster has a flat mass function with α ≈ 0.79.
- An adjacent stellar group with 218 members was identified.

## Abstract

We report the discovery of tidal structures around the intermediate-aged ($\sim$ 700--800~Myr), nearby ($\sim85$~pc) star cluster Coma Berenices. The spatial and kinematic grouping of stars is determined with the {\it Gaia} DR2 parallax and proper motion data, by a clustering analysis tool, \textsc{StarGO}, to map 5D parameters ($X, Y, Z$, $\mu_\alpha \cos\delta, \mu_\delta$) onto a 2D neural network. A leading and a trailing tails, each with an extension of $\sim50$~pc are revealed for the first time around this disrupting star cluster. The cluster members, totaling to $\sim115^{+5}_{-3}\,\rm {M_\odot}$, are clearly mass segregated, and exhibit a flat mass function with $\alpha \sim 0.79\pm0.16$, in the sense of $dN/dm \propto m^{-\alpha}$, where $N$ is the number of member stars and $m$ is stellar mass, in the mass range of $m=0.25$--$2.51~{\rm M_\odot}$. Within the tidal radius of $\sim$6.9~pc, there are 77 member candidates with an average position, i.e., as the cluster center, of R.A.= 186.8110~deg, and decl.= 25.8112~deg, and an average distance of 85.8~pc. Additional 120 member candidates reside in the tidal structures, i.e., outnumbering those in the cluster core. The expansion of escaping members lead to an anisotropy in the velocity field of the tidal tails. Our analysis also serendipitously uncovers an adjacent stellar group, part of which has been cataloged in the literature. We identify 218 member candidates, 10 times more than previously known. This star group is some 65~pc away from, and $\sim400$~Myr younger than, Coma Ber, but is already at the final stage of disruption.

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01404/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1902.01404