Escape from the Bermuda cluster: orphanization by multiple stellar ejections
J. Ma\'iz Apell\'aniz, M. Pantaleoni Gonz\'alez, R. H. Barb\'a, and M., Weiler

TL;DR
This study investigates the ejection of massive stars from the Bermuda cluster using Gaia data, revealing multiple ejection events that transformed the cluster into an orphan with a significantly altered mass function and ongoing expansion.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of multiple stellar ejections from the Bermuda cluster, demonstrating how these events have orphaned the cluster and changed its mass distribution.
Findings
Detected three stellar ejection events from the Bermuda cluster.
The cluster has lost over 200 solar masses, including its most massive stars.
The cluster is currently expanding, likely due to ejection events.
Abstract
CONTEXT. Dynamical interactions in young stellar clusters can eject massive stars early in their lives and significantly alter their mass functions. If all of the most massive stars are lost, we are left with an orphan cluster. AIMS. We study the Bermuda cluster (Villafranca O-014 NW), the most significant young stellar group in the North America and Pelican nebulae, and the massive stars that may have been ejected from it to test if it has been orphaned. METHODS. We use Gaia EDR3 parallaxes and proper motions to search for walkaway/runaway stars in the vicinity of the North America and Pelican nebulae. The candidates are analyzed with spectroscopy and photometry to assess their nature and their trajectories are traced back in time to determine at what time they left the Bermuda cluster. RESULTS. We detect three ejection events (Bajamar, Toronto, and HD 201 795 events) that…
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