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Hyades (star cluster)

The Hyades (/ˈh.ədz/; Greek Ὑάδες, also known as Caldwell 41, Collinder 50, or Melotte 25) is the nearest open cluster and one of the best-studied star clusters. Located about 153 light-years (47 parsecs)[1][2][3][4] away from the Sun, it consists of a roughly spherical group of hundreds of stars sharing the same age, place of origin, chemical characteristics, and motion through space.[1][5] From the perspective of observers on Earth, the Hyades Cluster appears in the constellation Taurus, where its brightest stars form a "V" shape along with the still-brighter Aldebaran. However, Aldebaran is unrelated to the Hyades, as it is located much closer to Earth and merely happens to lie along the same line of sight.

Hyades Cluster
Photograph of the Hyades Cluster
Observation data (J2000.0 epoch)
Right ascension4h 27m
Declination+15° 52′
Distance153 ly (47 pc[1][2][3][4])
Apparent magnitude (V)0.5
Apparent dimensions (V)330′
Physical characteristics
Mass400 M
Radius10 light-years (core radius)
Estimated age625 million years
Closest open cluster
Other designationsCaldwell 41, Cr 50, Mel 25
Associations
ConstellationTaurus
See also: Open cluster, List of open clusters

The five brightest member stars of the Hyades have consumed the hydrogen fuel at their cores and are now evolving into giant stars.[6] Four of these stars, with Bayer designations Gamma, Delta 1, Epsilon, and Theta Tauri, form an asterism that is traditionally identified as the head of Taurus the Bull.[6] The fifth of these stars is Theta1 Tauri, a tight naked-eye companion to the brighter Theta2 Tauri. Epsilon Tauri, known as Ain (the "Bull's Eye"), has a gas giant exoplanet candidate,[7] the first planet to be found in any open cluster.

The age of the Hyades is estimated to be about 625 million years.[1] The core of the cluster, where stars are the most densely packed, has a radius of 8.8 light-years (2.7 parsecs), and the cluster's tidal radius – where the stars become more strongly influenced by the gravity of the surrounding Milky Way galaxy – is 33 light-years (10 parsecs).[1] However, about one-third of confirmed member stars have been observed well outside the latter boundary, in the cluster's extended halo; these stars are probably in the process of escaping from its gravitational influence.[1]

Location and motion

 
Star chart of the Hyades cluster

The cluster is sufficiently close to the Sun that its distance can be directly measured by observing the amount of parallax shift of the member stars as the Earth orbits the Sun. This measurement has been performed with great accuracy using the Hipparcos satellite and the Hubble Space Telescope. An alternative method of computing the distance is to fit the cluster members to a standardized infrared color–magnitude diagram for stars of their type, and use the resulting data to infer their intrinsic brightness. Comparing this data to the brightness of the stars as seen from Earth allows their distances to be estimated. Both methods have yielded a distance estimate of 153 light-years (47 parsecs) to the cluster center.[1][2][3][4] The fact that these independent measurements agree makes the Hyades an important rung on the cosmic distance ladder method for estimating the distances of extragalactic objects.[citation needed]

The stars of the Hyades are more enriched in heavier elements than the Sun and other ordinary stars in the solar neighborhood, with the overall cluster metallicity measured at +0.14.[1] The Hyades Cluster is related to other stellar groups in the Sun's vicinity. Its age, metallicity, and proper motion coincide with those of the larger and more distant Praesepe Cluster,[8] and the trajectories of both clusters can be traced back to the same region of space, indicating a common origin.[9] Another associate is the Hyades Stream, a large collection of scattered stars that also share a similar trajectory with the Hyades Cluster. Recent results have found that at least 15% of stars in the Hyades Stream share the same chemical fingerprint as the Hyades cluster stars.[10] However, about 85% of stars in the Hyades Stream have been shown to be completely unrelated to the original cluster on the grounds of dissimilar age and metallicity; their common motion is attributed to tidal effects of the massive rotating bar at the center of the Milky Way galaxy.[11] Among the remaining members of the Hyades Stream, the exoplanet host star Iota Horologii has recently been proposed as an escaped member of the primordial Hyades Cluster.[12]

The Hyades are unrelated to two other nearby stellar groups, the Pleiades and the Ursa Major Stream, which are easily visible to the naked eye under clear dark skies.

 
The Hyades and the bright red giant Aldebaran (α Tauri, "the eye of the bull") as seen through a telescope

History

Together with the other eye-catching open star cluster of the Pleiades, the Hyades form the Golden Gate of the Ecliptic, which has been known for several thousand years.

In Greek mythology, the Hyades were the five daughters of Atlas and half-sisters to the Pleiades. After the death of their brother, Hyas, the weeping sisters were transformed into a cluster of stars that was afterwards associated with rain.

As a naked-eye object, the Hyades cluster has been known since prehistoric times. It is mentioned by numerous Classical authors from Homer to Ovid.[13] In Book 18 of the Iliad the stars of the Hyades appear along with the Pleiades, Ursa Major, and Orion on the shield that the god Hephaistos made for Achilles.[14]

In England the cluster was known as the "April Rainers" from an association with April showers, as recorded in the folk song "Green Grow the Rushes, O".

The cluster was probably first catalogued by Giovanni Battista Hodierna in 1654, and it subsequently appeared in many star atlases of the 17th and 18th centuries.[13] However, Charles Messier did not include the Hyades in his 1781 catalog of deep sky objects.[13] It therefore lacks a Messier number, unlike many other, more distant open clusters – e.g., M44 (Praesepe), M45 (Pleiades), and M67.

In 1869, the astronomer R.A. Proctor observed that numerous stars at large distances from the Hyades share a similar motion through space.[15] In 1908, Lewis Boss reported almost 25 years of observations to support this premise, arguing for the existence of a co-moving group of stars that he called the Taurus Stream (now generally known as the Hyades Stream or Hyades Supercluster). Boss published a chart that traced the scattered stars' movements back to a common point of convergence.[16]

By the 1920s, the notion that the Hyades shared a common origin with the Praesepe Cluster was widespread,[17] with Rudolf Klein-Wassink noting in 1927 that the two clusters are "probably cosmically related."[18] For much of the twentieth century, scientific study of the Hyades focused on determining its distance, modeling its evolution, confirming or rejecting candidate members, and characterizing individual stars.

Morphology and evolution

All stars form in clusters, but most clusters break up less than 50 million years after star formation concludes.[19] The astronomical term for this process is "evaporation." Only extremely massive clusters, orbiting far from the Galactic Center, can avoid evaporation over extended timescales.[20] As one such survivor, the Hyades Cluster probably contained a much larger star population in its infancy. Estimates of its original mass range from 800 to 1,600 times the mass of the Sun (M), implying still larger numbers of individual stars.[21][22]

Star populations

Theory predicts that a young cluster of this size should give birth to stars and substellar objects of all spectral types, from huge, hot O stars down to dim brown dwarfs.[22] However, studies of the Hyades show that it is deficient in stars at both extremes of mass.[5][23] At an age of 625 million years, the cluster's main sequence turn-off is about 2.3 M, meaning that all heavier stars have evolved into subgiants, giants, or white dwarfs, while less massive stars continue fusing hydrogen on the main sequence.[21] Extensive surveys have revealed a total of 8 white dwarfs in the cluster core,[24] corresponding to the final evolutionary stage of its original population of B-type stars (each about 3 M).[21] The preceding evolutionary stage is currently represented by the cluster's four red clump giants. Their present spectral type is K0 III, but all are actually "retired A stars" of around 2.5 M.[7][25][26] An additional "white giant" of type A7 III is the primary of θ² Tauri, a binary system that includes a less massive companion of spectral type A; this pair is visually associated with θ¹ Tauri, one of the four red giants, which also has an A-type binary companion.[25][27]

The remaining population of confirmed cluster members includes numerous bright stars of spectral types A (at least 21), F (about 60), and G (about 50).[1][23] All these star types are concentrated much more densely within the tidal radius of the Hyades than within an equivalent 10-parsec radius of the Earth. By comparison, our local 10-parsec sphere contains only 4 A stars, 6 F stars, and 21 G stars.[28]

The Hyades' cohort of lower-mass stars – spectral types K and M – remains poorly understood, despite proximity and long observation. At least 48 K dwarfs are confirmed members, along with about a dozen M dwarfs of spectral types M0-M2.[1][23][29] Additional M dwarfs have been proposed, but few are later than M3, and only about 12 brown dwarfs are currently reported.[5][30][31] This deficiency at the bottom of the mass range contrasts strongly with the distribution of stars within 10 parsecs of the Solar System, where at least 239 M dwarfs are known, comprising about 76% of all neighborhood stars.[28]

Mass segregation

The observed distribution of stellar types in the Hyades Cluster demonstrates a history of mass segregation. With the exception of its white dwarfs, the cluster's central two parsecs (6.5 light-years) contain only star systems of at least 1 M.[1] This tight concentration of heavy stars gives the Hyades its overall structure, with a core defined by bright, closely packed systems and a halo consisting of more widely separated stars in which later spectral types are common. The core radius is 2.7 parsecs (8.8 light-years, a little more than the distance between the Sun and Sirius), while the half-mass radius, within which half the cluster's mass is contained, is 5.7 parsecs (19 light-years). The tidal radius of ten parsecs (33 light-years) represents the Hyades' average outer limit, beyond which a star is unlikely to remain gravitationally bound to the cluster core.[1][21]

Stellar evaporation occurs in the cluster halo as smaller stars are scattered outward by more massive insiders. From the halo they may then be lost to tides exerted by the Galactic core or to shocks generated by collisions with drifting hydrogen clouds.[20] In this way the Hyades probably lost much of its original population of M dwarfs, along with substantial numbers of brighter stars.

Stellar multiplicity

Another result of mass segregation is the concentration of binary systems in the cluster core.[1][23] More than half of the known F and G stars are binaries, and these are preferentially located within this central region. As in the immediate Solar neighborhood, binarity increases with increasing stellar mass. The fraction of binary systems in the Hyades increases from 26% among K-type stars to 87% among A-type stars.[23] Hyades binaries tend to have small separations, with most binary pairs in shared orbits whose semimajor axes are smaller than 50 astronomical units.[32] Although the exact ratio of single to multiple systems in the cluster remains uncertain, this ratio has considerable implications for our understanding of its population. For example, Perryman and colleagues list about 200 high-probability Hyades members.[1] If the binary fraction is 50%, the total cluster population would be at least 300 individual stars.

Future evolution

Surveys indicate that 90% of open clusters dissolve less than 1 billion years after formation, while only a tiny fraction survive for the present age of the Solar System (about 4.6 billion years).[20] Over the next few hundred million years, the Hyades will continue to lose both mass and membership as its brightest stars evolve off the main sequence and its dimmest stars evaporate out of the cluster halo. It may eventually be reduced to a remnant containing about a dozen star systems, most of them binary or multiple, which will remain vulnerable to ongoing dissipative forces.[20]

Brightest stars

 
Bright stars in the core of the Hyades Cluster

This is a list of Hyades cluster member stars that are fourth magnitude or brighter.[33]

Hyades brightest stars
Designation HD Apparent
magnitude
Stellar
classification
Theta² Tauri 28319 3.398 A7III
Epsilon Tauri 28305 3.529 K0III
Gamma Tauri 27371 3.642 G8III
Delta¹ Tauri 27697 3.753 G8III
Theta¹ Tauri 28307 3.836 G7III
Kappa Tauri 27934 4.201 A7IV-V
90 Tauri 29388 4.262 A6V
Upsilon Tauri 28024 4.282 A8Vn
Delta² Tauri 27962 4.298 A2IV
71 Tauri 28052 4.480 F0V

In culture

The poem "Ulysses," by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, contains the line "Thro' scudding drifts the rainy Hyades// Vext the dim sea ..."

In the works of Robert W. Chambers, H. P. Lovecraft, and others, the fictional city of Carcosa is located on a planet in the Hyades.

A 2018 archaeoastronomical paper suggested that the Hyades may have inspired the Norse myth of Ragnarök.[34] Astronomer Donald Olson questioned these findings, pointing out minor errors in the paper's astronomical data.[35]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Perryman, M.A.C.; et al. (1998). "The Hyades: distance, structure, dynamics, and age". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 331: 81–120. arXiv:astro-ph/9707253. Bibcode:1998A&A...331...81P.
  2. ^ a b c van Leeuwen, F. "Parallaxes and proper motions for 20 open clusters as based on the new Hipparcos catalogue", A\&A, 2009
  3. ^ a b c Majaess, D.; Turner, D.; Lane, D.; Krajci, T. "Deep Infrared ZAMS Fits to Benchmark Open Clusters Hosting delta Scuti Stars", Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers, 2011
  4. ^ a b c McArthur, Barbara E.; Benedict, G. Fritz; Harrison, Thomas E.; van Altena, William "Astrometry with the Hubble Space Telescope: Trigonometric Parallaxes of Selected Hyads", AJ, 2011
  5. ^ a b c Bouvier J, Kendall T, Meeus G, Testi L, Moraux E, Stauffer JR, James D, Cuillandre J-C, Irwin J, McCaughrean MJ, Baraffe I, Bertin E. (2008) Brown dwarfs and very low mass stars in the Hyades cluster: a dynamically evolved mass function. Astronomy & Astrophysics, 481: 661-672. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2008A%26A...481..661B.
  6. ^ a b Jim Kaler. "Hyadum I". Jim Kaler's Stars. Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  7. ^ a b Sato B, Izumiura H, Toyota E, et al. (2007) A planetary companion to the Hyades giant Epsilon Tauri. Astrophysical Journal, 661: 527-531. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007ApJ...661..527S.
  8. ^ Dobbie, PD; Napiwotzki, R; Burleigh, MR; et al. (2006). "New Praesepe white dwarfs and the initial mass-final mass relation". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 369 (1): 383–389. arXiv:astro-ph/0603314. Bibcode:2006MNRAS.369..383D. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.10311.x. S2CID 17914736.
  9. ^ "Messier Object 44". SEDS. 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2012-12-24.
  10. ^ De Silva, G; et al. (2011). "High-resolution elemental abundance analysis of the Hyades supercluster". MNRAS. 415 (1): 563–575. arXiv:1103.2588. Bibcode:2011MNRAS.415..563D. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2966.2011.18728.x. S2CID 56280307.
  11. ^ Famaey B, Pont F, Luri X, Udry S, Mayor M, Jorissen A. (2007) The Hyades stream: an evaporated cluster or an intrusion from the inner disk? Astronomy & Astrophysics, 461: 957-962. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007A%26A...461..957F.
  12. ^ Vauclair, S.; Laymand, M.; Bouchy, F.; Vauclair, G.; Hui Bon Hoa, A.; Charpinet, S.; Bazot, M. (2008). "The exoplanet-host star iota Horologii: an evaporated member of the primordial Hyades cluster". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 482 (2): L5–L8. arXiv:0803.2029. Bibcode:2008A&A...482L...5V. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20079342. S2CID 18047352., announced in Emily Baldwin. . Archived from the original on 2008-04-21. Retrieved 2008-04-18.
  13. ^ a b c Information on the Hyades from SEDS
  14. ^ Homer. The Iliad. Translated by Richmond Lattimore. University of Chicago Press, 1951.
  15. ^ Zuckerman B, Song I. (2004) Young stars near the Sun. Annual Review of Astronomy & Astrophysics. Volume 42, 685-721. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2004ARA%26A..42..685Z.
  16. ^ Boss L. (1908) Convergent of a moving cluster in Taurus. Astronomical Journal, 26: 31-36. Full text link at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1908AJ.....26...31B.
  17. ^ Hertzsprung E. (1922) On the motions of Praesepe and of the Hyades. Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands, Vol. 1, p.150. Full text link at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1922BAN.....1..150H.
  18. ^ Klein-Wassink WJ. (1927) The proper motion and the distance of the Praesepe cluster. Publications of the Kapteyn Astronomical Laboratory Groningen, 41: 1-48. Full text link at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1927PGro...41....1K
  19. ^ Lada, CJ; Lada, EA (2003). "Embedded clusters in molecular clouds". Annual Review of Astronomy & Astrophysics. 41: 57–115. arXiv:astro-ph/0301540. Bibcode:2003ARA&A..41...57L. doi:10.1146/annurev.astro.41.011802.094844. S2CID 16752089.
  20. ^ a b c d Pavani, DB; Bica, E (2007). "Characterization of open cluster remnants". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 468 (1): 139–150. arXiv:0704.1159. Bibcode:2007A&A...468..139P. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20066240. S2CID 11609818.
  21. ^ a b c d Weideman V, Jordan S, Iben I, Casertano S. (1992) White dwarfs in the halo of the Hyades Cluster – The case of the missing white dwarfs. Astronomical Journal, 104: 1876-1891. 1992AJ....104.1876W.
  22. ^ a b Kroupa, P; Boily, CM (2002). "On the mass function of star clusters". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 336 (4): 1188–1194. arXiv:astro-ph/0207514. Bibcode:2002MNRAS.336.1188K. doi:10.1046/j.1365-8711.2002.05848.x. S2CID 15225436.
  23. ^ a b c d e Böhm-Vitense, E (2007). "Hyades morphology and star formation". Astronomical Journal. 133 (5): 1903–1910. Bibcode:2007AJ....133.1903B. doi:10.1086/512124.
  24. ^ Böhm-Vitense E. (1995) White dwarf companions to Hyades F stars. Astronomical Journal, 110: 228-231. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1995AJ....110..228B.
  25. ^ a b Torres, G; Stefanik, RP; Latham, DW (1997). "The Hyades binaries Theta1 Tauri and Theta2 Tauri: The distance to the cluster and the mass-luminosity relation". Astrophysical Journal. 485 (1): 167–181. Bibcode:1997ApJ...485..167T. doi:10.1086/304422.
  26. ^ Johnson JA, Fischer D, Marcy GW, Wright JT, Driscoll P, Butler RP, Hekker S, Reffert S, Vogt SS. (2007a) Retired A stars and their companions: Exoplanets orbiting three intermediate-mass subgiants. Astrophysical Journal, 665: 785-793. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2007ApJ...665..785J.
  27. ^ Armstrong, JT; Mozurkewich, D; Hajian, AR; et al. (2006). "The Hyades binary Theta2 Tauri: Confronting evolutionary models with optical interferometry". Astronomical Journal. 131 (5): 2643–2651. Bibcode:2006AJ....131.2643A. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.1000.4076. doi:10.1086/501429. S2CID 6268214.
  28. ^ a b Research Consortium on Nearby Stars (RECONS). Ten-parsec census at http://joy.chara.gsu.edu/RECONS/census.posted.htm.
  29. ^ Endl, M; Cochran, WD; Kurster, M; Paulson, DB; Wittenmyer, RA; MacQueen, PJ; Tull, RG (2006). "Exploring the frequency of close-in Jovian planets around M dwarfs". Astrophysical Journal. 649 (1): 436–443. arXiv:astro-ph/0606121. Bibcode:2006ApJ...649..436E. doi:10.1086/506465. S2CID 14461746.
  30. ^ Stauffer, JR; Balachandran, SC; Krishnamurthi, A; Pinsonneault, M; Terndrup, DM; Stern, RA (1997). "Rotational velocities and chromospheric activity of M dwarfs in the Hyades". Astrophysical Journal. 475 (2): 604–622. Bibcode:1997ApJ...479..776S. doi:10.1086/303930.
  31. ^ Hogan E, Jameson R F, Casewell SL, Osbourne, SL, Hambly NC. (2008) L dwarfs in the Hyades. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 388 (2) 495-499. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2008MNRAS.388..495H.
  32. ^ Patience J, Ghez AM, Reid IN, Weinberger AJ, Matthews K. (1998) The multiplicity of the Hyades and its implications for binary star formation and evolution. Astronomical Journal, 115: 1972-1988. Abstract at http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1998AJ....115.1972P.
  33. ^ Röser, S.; et al. (July 2011), "A deep all-sky census of the Hyades", Astronomy & Astrophysics, 531: 15, arXiv:1105.6093, Bibcode:2011A&A...531A..92R, doi:10.1051/0004-6361/201116948, S2CID 118630215, A92. In the Vizier catalogue, sort on Vmag using '<4.51'. See also the linked entries in the All-sky Compiled Catalogue of 2.5 million stars (Kharchenko+ 2009).{{citation}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  34. ^ Langer, Johnni (2018). "The Wolf's Jaw: an Astronomical Interpretation of Ragnarök". Archaeoastronomy and Ancient Technologies. 6 (1) – via ResearchGate.
  35. ^ Ouellette, Jennifer (2018-11-16). ""Wolf's jaw" star cluster may have inspired parts of Ragnarök myth". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2022-06-09.

External links

  • "Cl Melotte 25". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg.
  • Information on the Hyades from SEDS
  • Astronomy Picture of the Day (2000-09-29)
  • WEBDA open cluster database website for Hyades cluster – E. Paunzen (Univ. Vienna)
  • Distance to the Hyades undergraduate lab 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine – J. Lucey (University of Durham)
  • Hyades (star cluster) on WikiSky: DSS2, SDSS, GALEX, IRAS, Hydrogen α, X-Ray, Astrophoto, Sky Map, Articles and images
  • Hyades at Constellation Guide

hyades, star, cluster, hyades, greek, Ὑάδες, also, known, caldwell, collinder, melotte, nearest, open, cluster, best, studied, star, clusters, located, about, light, years, parsecs, away, from, consists, roughly, spherical, group, hundreds, stars, sharing, sam. The Hyades ˈ h aɪ e d iː z Greek Ὑades also known as Caldwell 41 Collinder 50 or Melotte 25 is the nearest open cluster and one of the best studied star clusters Located about 153 light years 47 parsecs 1 2 3 4 away from the Sun it consists of a roughly spherical group of hundreds of stars sharing the same age place of origin chemical characteristics and motion through space 1 5 From the perspective of observers on Earth the Hyades Cluster appears in the constellation Taurus where its brightest stars form a V shape along with the still brighter Aldebaran However Aldebaran is unrelated to the Hyades as it is located much closer to Earth and merely happens to lie along the same line of sight Hyades ClusterPhotograph of the Hyades ClusterObservation data J2000 0 epoch Right ascension4h 27mDeclination 15 52 Distance153 ly 47 pc 1 2 3 4 Apparent magnitude V 0 5Apparent dimensions V 330 Physical characteristicsMass400 M Radius10 light years core radius Estimated age625 million yearsClosest open clusterOther designationsCaldwell 41 Cr 50 Mel 25AssociationsConstellationTaurusSee also Open cluster List of open clustersThe five brightest member stars of the Hyades have consumed the hydrogen fuel at their cores and are now evolving into giant stars 6 Four of these stars with Bayer designations Gamma Delta 1 Epsilon and Theta Tauri form an asterism that is traditionally identified as the head of Taurus the Bull 6 The fifth of these stars is Theta1 Tauri a tight naked eye companion to the brighter Theta2 Tauri Epsilon Tauri known as Ain the Bull s Eye has a gas giant exoplanet candidate 7 the first planet to be found in any open cluster The age of the Hyades is estimated to be about 625 million years 1 The core of the cluster where stars are the most densely packed has a radius of 8 8 light years 2 7 parsecs and the cluster s tidal radius where the stars become more strongly influenced by the gravity of the surrounding Milky Way galaxy is 33 light years 10 parsecs 1 However about one third of confirmed member stars have been observed well outside the latter boundary in the cluster s extended halo these stars are probably in the process of escaping from its gravitational influence 1 Contents 1 Location and motion 2 History 3 Morphology and evolution 3 1 Star populations 3 2 Mass segregation 3 3 Stellar multiplicity 3 4 Future evolution 4 Brightest stars 5 In culture 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksLocation and motion Edit Star chart of the Hyades cluster The cluster is sufficiently close to the Sun that its distance can be directly measured by observing the amount of parallax shift of the member stars as the Earth orbits the Sun This measurement has been performed with great accuracy using the Hipparcos satellite and the Hubble Space Telescope An alternative method of computing the distance is to fit the cluster members to a standardized infrared color magnitude diagram for stars of their type and use the resulting data to infer their intrinsic brightness Comparing this data to the brightness of the stars as seen from Earth allows their distances to be estimated Both methods have yielded a distance estimate of 153 light years 47 parsecs to the cluster center 1 2 3 4 The fact that these independent measurements agree makes the Hyades an important rung on the cosmic distance ladder method for estimating the distances of extragalactic objects citation needed The stars of the Hyades are more enriched in heavier elements than the Sun and other ordinary stars in the solar neighborhood with the overall cluster metallicity measured at 0 14 1 The Hyades Cluster is related to other stellar groups in the Sun s vicinity Its age metallicity and proper motion coincide with those of the larger and more distant Praesepe Cluster 8 and the trajectories of both clusters can be traced back to the same region of space indicating a common origin 9 Another associate is the Hyades Stream a large collection of scattered stars that also share a similar trajectory with the Hyades Cluster Recent results have found that at least 15 of stars in the Hyades Stream share the same chemical fingerprint as the Hyades cluster stars 10 However about 85 of stars in the Hyades Stream have been shown to be completely unrelated to the original cluster on the grounds of dissimilar age and metallicity their common motion is attributed to tidal effects of the massive rotating bar at the center of the Milky Way galaxy 11 Among the remaining members of the Hyades Stream the exoplanet host star Iota Horologii has recently been proposed as an escaped member of the primordial Hyades Cluster 12 The Hyades are unrelated to two other nearby stellar groups the Pleiades and the Ursa Major Stream which are easily visible to the naked eye under clear dark skies The Hyades and the bright red giant Aldebaran a Tauri the eye of the bull as seen through a telescopeHistory EditTogether with the other eye catching open star cluster of the Pleiades the Hyades form the Golden Gate of the Ecliptic which has been known for several thousand years In Greek mythology the Hyades were the five daughters of Atlas and half sisters to the Pleiades After the death of their brother Hyas the weeping sisters were transformed into a cluster of stars that was afterwards associated with rain As a naked eye object the Hyades cluster has been known since prehistoric times It is mentioned by numerous Classical authors from Homer to Ovid 13 In Book 18 of the Iliad the stars of the Hyades appear along with the Pleiades Ursa Major and Orion on the shield that the god Hephaistos made for Achilles 14 In England the cluster was known as the April Rainers from an association with April showers as recorded in the folk song Green Grow the Rushes O The cluster was probably first catalogued by Giovanni Battista Hodierna in 1654 and it subsequently appeared in many star atlases of the 17th and 18th centuries 13 However Charles Messier did not include the Hyades in his 1781 catalog of deep sky objects 13 It therefore lacks a Messier number unlike many other more distant open clusters e g M44 Praesepe M45 Pleiades and M67 In 1869 the astronomer R A Proctor observed that numerous stars at large distances from the Hyades share a similar motion through space 15 In 1908 Lewis Boss reported almost 25 years of observations to support this premise arguing for the existence of a co moving group of stars that he called the Taurus Stream now generally known as the Hyades Stream or Hyades Supercluster Boss published a chart that traced the scattered stars movements back to a common point of convergence 16 By the 1920s the notion that the Hyades shared a common origin with the Praesepe Cluster was widespread 17 with Rudolf Klein Wassink noting in 1927 that the two clusters are probably cosmically related 18 For much of the twentieth century scientific study of the Hyades focused on determining its distance modeling its evolution confirming or rejecting candidate members and characterizing individual stars Morphology and evolution EditAll stars form in clusters but most clusters break up less than 50 million years after star formation concludes 19 The astronomical term for this process is evaporation Only extremely massive clusters orbiting far from the Galactic Center can avoid evaporation over extended timescales 20 As one such survivor the Hyades Cluster probably contained a much larger star population in its infancy Estimates of its original mass range from 800 to 1 600 times the mass of the Sun M implying still larger numbers of individual stars 21 22 Star populations Edit Theory predicts that a young cluster of this size should give birth to stars and substellar objects of all spectral types from huge hot O stars down to dim brown dwarfs 22 However studies of the Hyades show that it is deficient in stars at both extremes of mass 5 23 At an age of 625 million years the cluster s main sequence turn off is about 2 3 M meaning that all heavier stars have evolved into subgiants giants or white dwarfs while less massive stars continue fusing hydrogen on the main sequence 21 Extensive surveys have revealed a total of 8 white dwarfs in the cluster core 24 corresponding to the final evolutionary stage of its original population of B type stars each about 3 M 21 The preceding evolutionary stage is currently represented by the cluster s four red clump giants Their present spectral type is K0 III but all are actually retired A stars of around 2 5 M 7 25 26 An additional white giant of type A7 III is the primary of 8 Tauri a binary system that includes a less massive companion of spectral type A this pair is visually associated with 8 Tauri one of the four red giants which also has an A type binary companion 25 27 The remaining population of confirmed cluster members includes numerous bright stars of spectral types A at least 21 F about 60 and G about 50 1 23 All these star types are concentrated much more densely within the tidal radius of the Hyades than within an equivalent 10 parsec radius of the Earth By comparison our local 10 parsec sphere contains only 4 A stars 6 F stars and 21 G stars 28 The Hyades cohort of lower mass stars spectral types K and M remains poorly understood despite proximity and long observation At least 48 K dwarfs are confirmed members along with about a dozen M dwarfs of spectral types M0 M2 1 23 29 Additional M dwarfs have been proposed but few are later than M3 and only about 12 brown dwarfs are currently reported 5 30 31 This deficiency at the bottom of the mass range contrasts strongly with the distribution of stars within 10 parsecs of the Solar System where at least 239 M dwarfs are known comprising about 76 of all neighborhood stars 28 Mass segregation Edit The observed distribution of stellar types in the Hyades Cluster demonstrates a history of mass segregation With the exception of its white dwarfs the cluster s central two parsecs 6 5 light years contain only star systems of at least 1 M 1 This tight concentration of heavy stars gives the Hyades its overall structure with a core defined by bright closely packed systems and a halo consisting of more widely separated stars in which later spectral types are common The core radius is 2 7 parsecs 8 8 light years a little more than the distance between the Sun and Sirius while the half mass radius within which half the cluster s mass is contained is 5 7 parsecs 19 light years The tidal radius of ten parsecs 33 light years represents the Hyades average outer limit beyond which a star is unlikely to remain gravitationally bound to the cluster core 1 21 Stellar evaporation occurs in the cluster halo as smaller stars are scattered outward by more massive insiders From the halo they may then be lost to tides exerted by the Galactic core or to shocks generated by collisions with drifting hydrogen clouds 20 In this way the Hyades probably lost much of its original population of M dwarfs along with substantial numbers of brighter stars Stellar multiplicity Edit Another result of mass segregation is the concentration of binary systems in the cluster core 1 23 More than half of the known F and G stars are binaries and these are preferentially located within this central region As in the immediate Solar neighborhood binarity increases with increasing stellar mass The fraction of binary systems in the Hyades increases from 26 among K type stars to 87 among A type stars 23 Hyades binaries tend to have small separations with most binary pairs in shared orbits whose semimajor axes are smaller than 50 astronomical units 32 Although the exact ratio of single to multiple systems in the cluster remains uncertain this ratio has considerable implications for our understanding of its population For example Perryman and colleagues list about 200 high probability Hyades members 1 If the binary fraction is 50 the total cluster population would be at least 300 individual stars Future evolution Edit Surveys indicate that 90 of open clusters dissolve less than 1 billion years after formation while only a tiny fraction survive for the present age of the Solar System about 4 6 billion years 20 Over the next few hundred million years the Hyades will continue to lose both mass and membership as its brightest stars evolve off the main sequence and its dimmest stars evaporate out of the cluster halo It may eventually be reduced to a remnant containing about a dozen star systems most of them binary or multiple which will remain vulnerable to ongoing dissipative forces 20 Brightest stars Edit Bright stars in the core of the Hyades Cluster This is a list of Hyades cluster member stars that are fourth magnitude or brighter 33 Hyades brightest stars Designation HD Apparentmagnitude StellarclassificationTheta Tauri 28319 3 398 A7IIIEpsilon Tauri 28305 3 529 K0IIIGamma Tauri 27371 3 642 G8IIIDelta Tauri 27697 3 753 G8IIITheta Tauri 28307 3 836 G7IIIKappa Tauri 27934 4 201 A7IV V90 Tauri 29388 4 262 A6VUpsilon Tauri 28024 4 282 A8VnDelta Tauri 27962 4 298 A2IV71 Tauri 28052 4 480 F0VIn culture EditThe poem Ulysses by Alfred Lord Tennyson contains the line Thro scudding drifts the rainy Hyades Vext the dim sea In the works of Robert W Chambers H P Lovecraft and others the fictional city of Carcosa is located on a planet in the Hyades A 2018 archaeoastronomical paper suggested that the Hyades may have inspired the Norse myth of Ragnarok 34 Astronomer Donald Olson questioned these findings pointing out minor errors in the paper s astronomical data 35 See also EditList of open clustersReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Perryman M A C et al 1998 The Hyades distance structure dynamics and age Astronomy amp Astrophysics 331 81 120 arXiv astro ph 9707253 Bibcode 1998A amp A 331 81P a b c van Leeuwen F Parallaxes and proper motions for 20 open clusters as based on the new Hipparcos catalogue A amp A 2009 a b c Majaess D Turner D Lane D Krajci T Deep Infrared ZAMS Fits to Benchmark Open Clusters Hosting delta Scuti Stars Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers 2011 a b c McArthur Barbara E Benedict G Fritz Harrison Thomas E van Altena William Astrometry with the Hubble Space Telescope Trigonometric Parallaxes of Selected Hyads AJ 2011 a b c Bouvier J Kendall T Meeus G Testi L Moraux E Stauffer JR James D Cuillandre J C Irwin J McCaughrean MJ Baraffe I Bertin E 2008 Brown dwarfs and very low mass stars in the Hyades cluster a dynamically evolved mass function Astronomy amp Astrophysics 481 661 672 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2008A 26A 481 661B a b Jim Kaler Hyadum I Jim Kaler s Stars Retrieved 29 October 2013 a b Sato B Izumiura H Toyota E et al 2007 A planetary companion to the Hyades giant Epsilon Tauri Astrophysical Journal 661 527 531 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2007ApJ 661 527S Dobbie PD Napiwotzki R Burleigh MR et al 2006 New Praesepe white dwarfs and the initial mass final mass relation Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 369 1 383 389 arXiv astro ph 0603314 Bibcode 2006MNRAS 369 383D doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2006 10311 x S2CID 17914736 Messier Object 44 SEDS 2007 08 25 Retrieved 2012 12 24 De Silva G et al 2011 High resolution elemental abundance analysis of the Hyades supercluster MNRAS 415 1 563 575 arXiv 1103 2588 Bibcode 2011MNRAS 415 563D doi 10 1111 j 1365 2966 2011 18728 x S2CID 56280307 Famaey B Pont F Luri X Udry S Mayor M Jorissen A 2007 The Hyades stream an evaporated cluster or an intrusion from the inner disk Astronomy amp Astrophysics 461 957 962 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2007A 26A 461 957F Vauclair S Laymand M Bouchy F Vauclair G Hui Bon Hoa A Charpinet S Bazot M 2008 The exoplanet host star iota Horologii an evaporated member of the primordial Hyades cluster Astronomy and Astrophysics 482 2 L5 L8 arXiv 0803 2029 Bibcode 2008A amp A 482L 5V doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20079342 S2CID 18047352 announced in Emily Baldwin The Drifting Star Archived from the original on 2008 04 21 Retrieved 2008 04 18 a b c Information on the Hyades from SEDS Homer The Iliad Translated by Richmond Lattimore University of Chicago Press 1951 Zuckerman B Song I 2004 Young stars near the Sun Annual Review of Astronomy amp Astrophysics Volume 42 685 721 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2004ARA 26A 42 685Z Boss L 1908 Convergent of a moving cluster in Taurus Astronomical Journal 26 31 36 Full text link at http adsabs harvard edu abs 1908AJ 26 31B Hertzsprung E 1922 On the motions of Praesepe and of the Hyades Bulletin of the Astronomical Institutes of the Netherlands Vol 1 p 150 Full text link at http adsabs harvard edu abs 1922BAN 1 150H Klein Wassink WJ 1927 The proper motion and the distance of the Praesepe cluster Publications of the Kapteyn Astronomical Laboratory Groningen 41 1 48 Full text link at http adsabs harvard edu abs 1927PGro 41 1K Lada CJ Lada EA 2003 Embedded clusters in molecular clouds Annual Review of Astronomy amp Astrophysics 41 57 115 arXiv astro ph 0301540 Bibcode 2003ARA amp A 41 57L doi 10 1146 annurev astro 41 011802 094844 S2CID 16752089 a b c d Pavani DB Bica E 2007 Characterization of open cluster remnants Astronomy amp Astrophysics 468 1 139 150 arXiv 0704 1159 Bibcode 2007A amp A 468 139P doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20066240 S2CID 11609818 a b c d Weideman V Jordan S Iben I Casertano S 1992 White dwarfs in the halo of the Hyades Cluster The case of the missing white dwarfs Astronomical Journal 104 1876 1891 1992AJ 104 1876W a b Kroupa P Boily CM 2002 On the mass function of star clusters Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 336 4 1188 1194 arXiv astro ph 0207514 Bibcode 2002MNRAS 336 1188K doi 10 1046 j 1365 8711 2002 05848 x S2CID 15225436 a b c d e Bohm Vitense E 2007 Hyades morphology and star formation Astronomical Journal 133 5 1903 1910 Bibcode 2007AJ 133 1903B doi 10 1086 512124 Bohm Vitense E 1995 White dwarf companions to Hyades F stars Astronomical Journal 110 228 231 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 1995AJ 110 228B a b Torres G Stefanik RP Latham DW 1997 The Hyades binaries Theta1 Tauri and Theta2 Tauri The distance to the cluster and the mass luminosity relation Astrophysical Journal 485 1 167 181 Bibcode 1997ApJ 485 167T doi 10 1086 304422 Johnson JA Fischer D Marcy GW Wright JT Driscoll P Butler RP Hekker S Reffert S Vogt SS 2007a Retired A stars and their companions Exoplanets orbiting three intermediate mass subgiants Astrophysical Journal 665 785 793 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2007ApJ 665 785J Armstrong JT Mozurkewich D Hajian AR et al 2006 The Hyades binary Theta2 Tauri Confronting evolutionary models with optical interferometry Astronomical Journal 131 5 2643 2651 Bibcode 2006AJ 131 2643A CiteSeerX 10 1 1 1000 4076 doi 10 1086 501429 S2CID 6268214 a b Research Consortium on Nearby Stars RECONS Ten parsec census at http joy chara gsu edu RECONS census posted htm Endl M Cochran WD Kurster M Paulson DB Wittenmyer RA MacQueen PJ Tull RG 2006 Exploring the frequency of close in Jovian planets around M dwarfs Astrophysical Journal 649 1 436 443 arXiv astro ph 0606121 Bibcode 2006ApJ 649 436E doi 10 1086 506465 S2CID 14461746 Stauffer JR Balachandran SC Krishnamurthi A Pinsonneault M Terndrup DM Stern RA 1997 Rotational velocities and chromospheric activity of M dwarfs in the Hyades Astrophysical Journal 475 2 604 622 Bibcode 1997ApJ 479 776S doi 10 1086 303930 Hogan E Jameson R F Casewell SL Osbourne SL Hambly NC 2008 L dwarfs in the Hyades Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 388 2 495 499 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 2008MNRAS 388 495H Patience J Ghez AM Reid IN Weinberger AJ Matthews K 1998 The multiplicity of the Hyades and its implications for binary star formation and evolution Astronomical Journal 115 1972 1988 Abstract at http adsabs harvard edu abs 1998AJ 115 1972P Roser S et al July 2011 A deep all sky census of the Hyades Astronomy amp Astrophysics 531 15 arXiv 1105 6093 Bibcode 2011A amp A 531A 92R doi 10 1051 0004 6361 201116948 S2CID 118630215 A92 In the Vizier catalogue sort on Vmag using lt 4 51 See also the linked entries in the All sky Compiled Catalogue of 2 5 million stars Kharchenko 2009 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint postscript link Langer Johnni 2018 The Wolf s Jaw an Astronomical Interpretation of Ragnarok Archaeoastronomy and Ancient Technologies 6 1 via ResearchGate Ouellette Jennifer 2018 11 16 Wolf s jaw star cluster may have inspired parts of Ragnarok myth Ars Technica Retrieved 2022 06 09 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hyades Cl Melotte 25 SIMBAD Centre de donnees astronomiques de Strasbourg Information on the Hyades from SEDS Astronomy Picture of the Day 2000 09 29 WEBDA open cluster database website for Hyades cluster E Paunzen Univ Vienna Distance to the Hyades undergraduate lab Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine J Lucey University of Durham Hyades star cluster on WikiSky DSS2 SDSS GALEX IRAS Hydrogen a X Ray Astrophoto Sky Map Articles and imagesHyades at Constellation Guide Portals Astronomy Stars Outer space Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hyades star cluster amp oldid 1142807707, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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