The statistical analysis of the dynamical evolution of the open clusters
Jayanand Maurya, Y. C. Joshi, Manash Ranjan Samal, Vineet Rawat, and, Anubha Singh Gour

TL;DR
This study analyzes the dynamical evolution of ten open clusters using Gaia and ground-based data, focusing on mass segregation and tidal interactions, revealing moderate to weak segregation and a correlation between cluster structure and galactocentric distance.
Contribution
It provides a detailed dynamical analysis of ten open clusters, including mass segregation ratios and the impact of tidal interactions, based on combined Gaia and ground-based observations.
Findings
Moderate mass segregation in five clusters.
Weak or no mass segregation in five clusters.
Positive correlation between R_h/R_t ratio and galactocentric distance.
Abstract
We present the dynamical evolution of ten open clusters which were part of our previous studies. These clusters include both young and intermediate-age open clusters with ages ranging from 2519 Myr to 1.780.20 Gyr. The total mass of these clusters ranges from 356.18142.90 to 1811.75901.03 M. The Galactocentric distances to the clusters are in the range of 8.910.02 to 11.740.18 kpc. The study is based on the ground-based UBVRI data supplemented by the astrometric data from the Gaia archive. We studied the minimum spanning tree of the member stars for these clusters. The mass segregation in these clusters was quantified by mass segregation ratios calculated from the mean edge length obtained through the minimum spanning tree. The clusters NGC 2360, NGC 1960, IC 1442, King 21, and SAI 35 have to be 1.650.18, 1.940.22,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
