Abstract
We have used RcIc CCD photometry from the Isaac Newton telescope and intermediate-resolution spectroscopy from the Gemini North telescope to identify and characterize low-mass (0.15 < 1.3)pre-main-sequence stars in the young open cluster NGC 2169. Isochrone fitting to the high- and low-mass populations yields an intrinsic distance modulus of 10.13-0.09+0.06 mag and a model-dependent age of 9 ± 2 Myr. Compared to the nearby, kinematically defined groups of a similar age, NGC 2169 has a large low-mass population which potentially offers a more precise statistical investigation of several aspects of star formation and early stellar evolution. By modelling the distribution of low-mass stars in the Ic versus RC - Ic diagram, we find that any age spread among cluster members has a Gaussian full width at half-maximum (FWHM) ≤ 2.5 Myr. A young age and a small age spread (<10 Myr) are supported by the lack of significant lithium depletion in the vast majority of cluster members. There is no clear evidence for accretion or warm circumstellar dust in the low-mass members of NGC 2169, bolstering the idea that strong accretion has ceased and inner discs have dispersed in almost all low-mass stars by ages of 10 Myr. © 2007 RAS.
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Jeffries, R. D., Oliveira, J. M., Naylor, T., Mayne, N. J., & Littlefair, S. P. (2007). The Keele-Exeter young cluster survey - I. Low-mass pre-main-sequence stars in NGC 2169. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 376(2), 580–598. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.11327.x
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