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New Members of the TW Hydrae Association, β Pictoris Moving Group, and Tucana/Horologium Association
Author(s) -
Inseok Song,
B. Zuckerman,
M. S. Bessell
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
the astrophysical journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.376
H-Index - 489
eISSN - 1538-4357
pISSN - 0004-637X
DOI - 10.1086/379194
Subject(s) - physics , astrophysics , stars , proper motion , stellar classification , main sequence , planet , astronomy , radial velocity
We have identified five new members of the TW Hydrae association (TWA), 11 new members of the ? Pic moving group, and 11 new Tucana/Horologium association members. These are the three youngest (30 Myr) known kinematic stellar groups near the Earth. Newly identified ? Pic group members are located mostly in the northern hemisphere, and they have a slightly different U-component of Galactic velocity compared to that of previously known members. Tracing the motion of ? Pic members backward in time for 12 Myr indicates that they might have formed in a small region with an initial velocity dispersion of ~8 km s-1. A couple of mid-M spectral type ? Pic members show emission features [He I ?5876+?6678) and Na D ?5890+?5896)] seen among earlier spectral type stars in the TWA and ? Pic groups. To derive the distances of the non-Hipparcos members of these groups, we have constructed a V-K versus MK color-magnitude diagram that is very useful in separating young K/M stars from older main-sequence counterparts and constraining theoretical pre-main-sequence evolutionary tracks. All newly identified K- and M-type members of the three groups show saturated X-ray activity (LX/Lbol ~ 10-3). One newly identified TWA member, SSS 101727-5354, is estimated to be only 22 pc away from Earth. Its extreme youth, late spectral type (~M5), and proximity to Earth make SSS 101727-5354 perhaps the best target for direct imaging detection of cooling planets.

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