The TW Hydrae Association is a cluster chain of Sco-Cen
N. Miret-Roig, J. Alves, S. Ratzenb\"ock, P. A. B. Galli, H. Bouy, F., Figueras, J. Gro{\ss}schedl, S. Meingast, L. Posch, A. Rottensteiner, C., Swiggum, N. Wagner

TL;DR
This study reveals that the TW Hydrae Association is part of a sequential star formation chain originating from the Sco-Cen OB association, highlighting the influence of massive stars on local star and planet formation processes.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the origin and structure of TWA, demonstrating its connection to Sco-Cen and proposing a broader framework for understanding young local associations in the Milky Way.
Findings
TWA is part of a cluster chain from Sco-Cen.
TWA's shape is influenced by its formation and will dissipate in less than 50 Myr.
YLAs and Sco-Cen are part of the $oldsymbol{ extalpha}$ Persei cluster family.
Abstract
The TW Hydrae Association (TWA) is a young local association (YLA) about 50 pc from the Sun, offering a unique opportunity to study star and planet formation processes in detail. We characterized TWA's location, kinematics, and age, investigating its origin within the Scorpius-Centaurus (Sco-Cen) OB association. Using Gaia DR3 astrometric data and precise ground-based radial velocities, we identified substructures within TWA, tentatively dividing them into TWA-a and TWA-b. Sco-Cen's massive cluster Cen (15 Myr, 1,805 members) may have influenced TWA's formation. The alignment of Cen, TWA-a, and TWA-b in 3D positions, velocities, and ages resembles patterns in regions such as Corona Australis, suggesting that TWA is part of a cluster chain from sequential star formation induced by massive stars in Sco-Cen. TWA's elongation in the opposite direction to that produced by…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena
