A Hipparcos study of the Hyades open cluster: Improved colour-absolute magnitude and Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams
Jos H.J. de Bruijne, Ronnie Hoogerwerf, P. Tim de Zeeuw (Sterrewacht, Leiden)

TL;DR
This study uses Hipparcos data to refine distance measurements to Hyades stars, resulting in improved Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams that support stellar convection theories and enhance calibration of stellar models.
Contribution
It provides more precise parallaxes for Hyades members, confirming Hipparcos measurements and revealing features in the HR diagram that support theoretical predictions about stellar convection.
Findings
Well-defined main sequence with two gaps/turn-offs
Confirmation of surface convection effects on star colours
Constraints on stellar transformation calibrations
Abstract
Hipparcos parallaxes fix distances to individual stars in the Hyades cluster with an accuracy of 6%. We use the Hipparcos (and Tycho-2) proper motions, which have a larger relative precision than the trigonometric parallaxes, to derive ~3 times more precise distance estimates, by assuming that all members share the same space motion. The improved parallaxes as a set are statistically consistent with the Hipparcos parallaxes. The new parallaxes confirm that the Hipparcos measurements are correlated on small angular scales, consistent with the limits specified in the Hipparcos Catalogue, though with significantly smaller `amplitudes' than claimed by Narayanan & Gould. The colour-absolute magnitude diagram of the cluster based on the new paral- laxes shows a well-defined main sequence with two gaps/turn-offs. These features provide the first direct observational support of…
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
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · History and Developments in Astronomy
