Searching for Solar Siblings in APOGEE and $Gaia$ DR2 with N-body Simulations
Jeremy J. Webb, Natalie Price-Jones, Jo Bovy, Simon Portegies Zwart,, Jason A. S. Hunt, J. Ted Mackereth, Henry W. Leung

TL;DR
This study combines observational data from APOGEE and Gaia with N-body simulations to identify potential solar siblings based on their chemical and dynamical properties, suggesting the Sun's birth cluster has likely dissolved.
Contribution
It introduces a new method of identifying solar siblings by integrating chemical abundances with simulated orbital actions in various galactic models.
Findings
104 stars match the simulated action ranges for solar siblings.
One candidate, Solar Sibling 1, has chemistry and actions similar to the Sun.
The likely birth cluster has dissolved, not remaining as M67.
Abstract
We make use of APOGEE and data to identify stars that are consistent with being born in the same association or star cluster as the Sun. We limit our analysis to stars that match solar abundances within their uncertainties, as they could have formed from the same Giant Molecular Cloud (GMC) as the Sun. We constrain the range of orbital actions that solar siblings can have with a suite of simulations of solar birth clusters evolved in static and time-dependent tidal fields. The static components of each galaxy model are the bulge, disk, and halo, while the various time-dependent components include a bar, spiral arms, and GMCs. In galaxy models without GMCs, simulated solar siblings all have km kpc, km kpc, and km kpc. Given the actions of stars in APOGEE and , we find 104 stars that…
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