A kinematically unbiased, all-sky search for nearby, young, low-mass stars
Alexander S. Binks, Matthieu Chalifour, Joel H. Kastner, David, Rodriguez, Simon J. Murphy, David A. Principe, Kristina Punzi, Germano G., Sacco, Jes\'us Hern\'andez

TL;DR
This study identifies 146 nearby, young, low-mass star candidates using Gaia, GALEX, and 2MASS data, revealing a potentially unrecognized population of young stars with atypical kinematics and low X-ray activity.
Contribution
It presents a novel all-sky, kinematically unbiased method to find nearby young stars, expanding the known population beyond established moving groups.
Findings
Only about 10% of candidates are linked to known young moving groups.
Most candidates show anomalous kinematics, suggesting a new young star population.
Many young candidates are surprisingly X-ray faint.
Abstract
The past two decades have seen dramatic progress in our knowledge of the population of young stars of age Myr that lie within pc of the Sun. These nearby, young stars, most of which are found in loose, comoving groups, provide the opportunity to explore (among many other things) the dissolution of stellar clusters and their diffusion into the field star population. Here, we exploit the combination of astrometric and photometric data from {\it Gaia} and photometric data from GALEX (UV) and 2MASS (near-IR) in an attempt to identify additional nearby, young, late-type stars. Specifically, we present a sample of 146 GALEX UV-selected late-type (predominantly K-type) field stars with {\it Gaia}-based distances pc (based on {\it Gaia} Data Release 1) that have isochronal ages Myr even if equal-components binaries. We investigate the spectroscopic and kinematic…
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