- Moving group
In
astronomy , a moving group is a number ofstars considered together because they share the same age,metallicity , and kinematics (radial velocity andproper motion ). Hence, stars in a moving group likely formed in proximity and at nearly the same time from the samegas cloud , and theirstar cluster was subsequently disrupted by tidal forces. [cite journal
last=Johnston | first=Kathryn V.
title=Fossil Signatures of Ancient Accretion Events in the Halo
journal=Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society
year=1995 | volume=27 | pages=1370
url=http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph?papernum=9602060
accessdate=2008-08-10 ]Introduction
It is widely accepted that most stars form in
clusters orassociations containing dozens to thousands of members. These clusters and associations dissociate with time leaving behind a loose group of stars with similar properties. The concept of moving groups was first introduced byOlin Eggen in the 1960s (Eggen 1965). Moving groups can be young (50 Myr,AB Doradus moving group ) or old (2 Gyr,HR 1614 moving group). A list of the nearest young moving groups has been compiled by López-Santiago et al. (2006).ee also
*
Stellar association
*Open Clusters References
* Eggen, O.J. 1965, in Moving Groups of Stars. Galactic structure. Edited by Adriaan Blaauw and Maarten Schmidt. Published by the University of Chicago Press, Chicago, ILL USA, 1965., p.111 (ADS entry [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1965gast.conf..111E] )
* López-Santiago, J., Montes, D., Crespo-Chacón, I., & Fernández-Figueroa, M. J. 2006, The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 643, Issue 2, pp. 1160-1165 (ADS entry [http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2006ApJ...643.1160L] )
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