A Multi-Method Age Determination for the Ursa Major Moving Group
Julia Sheffler, Max Clark, Melinda Soares-Furtado, Adam Distler, Ritvik Sai Narayan, Jenna Karcheski, Kenneth Nordsieck

TL;DR
This study determines the age of the Ursa Major Moving Group to be approximately 418 million years using multiple independent methods, providing a valuable benchmark for stellar and planetary evolution research.
Contribution
It offers the largest sample of candidate members and a convergent age estimate using lithium, gyrochronology, and photometric variability, clarifying the group's age and membership.
Findings
Convergent age estimate of ~418 Myr for UMa.
Identification of 1172 candidate members within 100 pc.
Validation of multiple methods for stellar age determination.
Abstract
The Ursa Major Moving Group (UMa) is one of the closest stellar associations, yet its age has remained controversial, with published estimates ranging from 200 Myr to 1 Gyr. We present a comprehensive age analysis using the largest sample of candidate UMa members to date. Using Gaia DR3, we identify 1172 stars within 100 pc of the Sun with 3D kinematic motions consistent with group membership. We determine the age of UMa's dominant population using three independent methods: lithium equivalent widths , gyrochronology , and photometric variability indicators . The three methods converge on a consistent age of . While our kinematic selection includes field stars that share UMa's space motion but are not coeval members, the convergent age determinations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
