SETI bioastro: Galactic Open Clusters

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Sat Sep 10 2005 - 03:06:22 UTC

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    Paper: astro-ph/0509152
    Date: Tue, 6 Sep 2005 23:34:36 GMT (64kb)

    Title: Galactic Open Clusters

    Authors: Ted von Hippel

    Comments: 14 pages, to appear in Resolved Stellar Populations, ASP Conference
    in Cancun
    \\
    The study of open clusters has a classic feel to it since the subject
    predates anyone alive today. Despite the age of this topic, I show via an ADS
    search that its relevance and importance in astronomy has grown faster in the
    last few decades than astronomy in general. This is surely due to both
    technical reasons and the interconnection of the field of stellar evolution to
    many branches of astronomy. In this review, I outline what we know today about
    open clusters and what they have taught us about a range of topics from stellar
    evolution to Galactic structure to stellar disk dissipation timescales. I argue
    that the most important astrophysics we have learned from open clusters is
    stellar evolution and that its most important product has been reasonably
    precise stellar ages. I discuss where open cluster research is likely to go in
    the next few years, as well as in the era of 20m telescopes, SIM, and GAIA. Age
    will continue to be of wide relevance in astronomy, from cosmology to planet
    formation timescales, and with distance errors soon no longer a problem,
    improved ages will be critically important to many of the most fascinating
    astrophysical questions.

    \\ ( http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0509152 , 64kb)


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