The distribution of open clusters in the Galaxy
H. Monteiro, D. A. Barros, W. S. Dias, J. R. D. L\'epine

TL;DR
This study uses an updated catalog of 1750 galactic open clusters from Gaia DR2 to analyze their distribution, determine the Galaxy's spiral pattern rotation speed, and explore the implications of the corotation radius and galactic resonances.
Contribution
It provides a refined measurement of the Galaxy's spiral pattern rotation speed and corotation radius using an expanded and improved open cluster catalog from Gaia DR2.
Findings
The spiral pattern rotation speed is 28.5 km/s/kpc.
The corotation radius is approximately equal to the solar orbit.
The catalog reveals a corotation gap in the gas distribution.
Abstract
In this work we explore the new catalog of galactic open clusters that became available recently, containing 1750 clusters that have been re-analysed using the Gaia DR2 catalog to determine the stellar memberships. We used the young open clusters as tracers of spiral arms and determined the spiral pattern rotation speed of the Galaxy and the corotation radius, the strongest Galactic resonance. The sample of open clusters used here increases the last one from Dias et al. (2019) used in the previous determination of the pattern speed by dozens objects. In addition, the distances and ages values are better determined, using improvements to isochrone fitting and including an updated extinction polynomial for the Gaia DR2 photometric band-passes, and the Galactic abundance gradient as a prior for metallicity. In addition to the better age determinations, the catalog contains better positions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
