A team of ICCUB researchers finds 582 open clusters in the Milky Way

Title
Mapa de densitat d'estrelles amb les dades de Gaia
Credits
Kevin Jardine (@galaxy_map)
Published

The team, led by Alfred Castro-Ginard, discovered 582 new open clusters of stars, using data from the Gaia mission. 

Stellar clusters are groups of gravitationally bound stars, that were formed in the same event and therefore have the same age and chemical composition. The study of open clusters allows a better understanding of the origin and evolution of galaxies. There are two types of stellar clusters; the globular clusters, formed by older stars, and the open clusters, formed by relatively young stars - younger than a few million years old.  The open clusters can only be found in irregular and spiral-shaped galaxies, which have an active stellar formation.

A team from the Institute of Cosmos Sciences has found 582 of this second type of open clusters. They used the data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia mission, which is mapping the Milky Way since it first entered into orbit in 2013. This data package is known as the second Gaia data release DR2. 

Researchers have been developing a new method for the study of open clusters during the past two years. Alfred Castro-Ginard, member of the ICCUB's Gaia group, led the research. “We didn’t have any methodology for detecting these objects in a homogenous way before, and we didn’t have such an extended and precise data catalogue either”, he comments. The team used a method based on machine-learning, which they first applied to a small set of data – in a paper published in 2018, and then to a certain part of the galaxy – in a paper published in 2019. “The reason of choosing this method was the release of the second data package of Gaia, which includes more than a thousand million stars. We though than in order to analyse such a big volume of data, we needed to automatize the processes”.

iyf
          In orange, the number of previously known open clusters; in grey,
          the ones discovered in this article.  

The new methodology allowed the team to identify the overdensities in the galactic disc in the first place. Then, they applied an algorithm that selected those overdensities that were candidates of being open clusters, and applied an artificial neural network. This network checked every candidate, searching for isochronic patterns of colour and magnitude. At the end of the process, they confirmed 582 new open clusters.

“Previously, there were around 1200 known open clusters. Now, we have found 650 new ones – 23 in the first article; 53 in the second, and 582 now - combining Gaia’s data and our new methodology”, explains Castro-Ginard. “Having a complete catalogue of the open clusters and stellar objects in the Milky Way allows us to better study those regions with active stellar formation, the mechanisms of formation and dissolution of clusters in the field, or to calculate certain parameters such as the cluster’s initial function of mass”.

Alfred Castro-Ginard is currently working on his PhD thesis, in which he applies machine-learning techniques to the Gaia’s data sets, aiming to discerning the patterns of open cluster formation, and better understand the galaxy structure.  He also participates in the Gaia’s data validation process, as a member of the DPAC group.

 

 

ghjk
Map of the 582 open clusters' made by Kevin Jardine (@galaxy_map). Radii were calculated using eGLON i eGLAT
map2
Map of the stellar objects in the Milky Way, using Gaia's data. The newly discovered open clusters by Castro-Ginard et al. can be seen in white colour (C) Kevin Jardine (@galaxy_map)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


You can read the full article at the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics

Related publications:

 

 

Related News & Activities

First calibrated XP spectra
Source
Agència Espacial Europea (ESA)
Language
CA
Gaia has proven to be a powerful tool providing very precise astrometry and photometry in the first releases of the mission (see Gaia DR2 and Gaia DR1). The third release and beyond (find here the current release scenario planning) will include some calibrated spectrophotometric data.

Related Material

Exhibitions
Mil milions d'ulls per a mil milions d'estrelles

The exhibition "Mil milions d'ulls per a mil milions d'estrelles" is dedicated to the Gaia mission, designed and built by the European Space Agency to measure the positions, distances and movements

Language
CA
ES
EN
DE
Press Radio & TV
The discoveries of the Gaia mission
The astronomer Josep Manel Carrasco explains the discoveries of the Gaia mission to the radio station Radio Sant Boi, especially about the second Gaia data release DR2. Since the release, several research groups across the world have been using the data, and 1.700 papers have been published.
Author
Josep Manel Carrasco, ICCUB-IEEC
Source
Ràdio Sant Boi
Language
CA
Graphic Material
Bookmark of Gaia

Bookmarks of the mission Gaia.

Source
GaiaUB
Language
CA
ES
Bookmark
Videos
The Gaia mission

The Gaia mission is a project of the European Space Agency in order to map more than hundreds of millions of stars with high precision.

Source
GaiaUB
Language
CA
ES
Popularisation of Science