The Cluster Palomar 1

Members of the Palomar (Pal 1) stellar cluster

Finding Targets

An object whose APOGEE_TARGET1 value includes one or more of the bitmasks in the following table was targeted for spectroscopy as part of this ancillary target program. See SDSS bitmasks to learn how to use these values to identify objects in this ancillary target program.

APOGEE_TARGET1
bit name
Bit Target Description
APOGEE_GC_PAL1 24 star in Palomar 1 stellar cluster

Description

Pal 1 is a faint, potentially young globular cluster that may be associated with the Monoceros Ring or Galactic Anti-center Stellar Stream (Rosenberg et al. 1998b; Crane et al. 2003), and whose spatial position, young age, and extended tidal tails (Niederste-Ostholt et al. 2010) make it a good candidate for a recently accreted object currently undergoing disruption by the Milky Way. This ancillary program is collecting the first large and homogeneous set of spectra in this red, faint, sparse cluster, with the goal of tightly constraining the cluster's metallicity and exploring its potentially-unusual chemistry in many dimensions.

Primary contact

Inese Ivans
University of Utah
iii -at- physics.utah.edu

Other contacts

Matthew Shetrone, Jennifer Simmerer

Target Selection Details

The cluster targets were selected with a combination of 2MASS and SDSS photometry. The initial selection comprised 2MASS stars less than 90 arcmin from the cluster center that satisfied the following criteria:

Then the sample was trimmed to those stars bracketed in (J-Ks) by isochrones at the most probable boundaries of the cluster age (5 to 12 Gyr) and metallicity ([Fe/H]=-1 to -0.5), assuming E(J-Ks)=0.112 and a distance modulus of 15.76 (Rosenberg et al. 1998a,b; Sarajedini et al. 2007; Harris 2010).
After all the 2MASS-selected candidates were matched with the SDSS DR7 photometric database (Abazajian et al. 2009), an additional cut in (u, g-r) space was performed. As the few existing ugr red giant branch isochrones are rather inconsistent in the possible age range of the cluster, stars along the probable giant branch locus were randomly selected, with even sampling between 0.5 < (g-r) < 1.6 mag. Also included are the three stars identified as cluster members by Rosenberg et al. (1998a).

REFERENCES

Abazajian, K. N., Adelman-McCarthy, J. K., Agüeros, M. A., et al. 2009, ApJS, 182, 543
Crane, J., Majewski, S. R., Rocha-Pinto, H. J., et al. 2003, ApJ, 594, L119
Harris, W.E. 2010, arXiv:1012.3224
Niederste-Ostholt, et al. 2010, MNRAS:L, 408, L66
Rosenberg, A., Piotto, G., Saviane, I., Aparicio, A., & Gratton, R. 1998a, AJ, 115, 658
Rosenberg, A., Saviane, I., Piotto, G., Aparicio, A., & Zaggia, S. R. 1998b, AJ, 115, 648
Sarajedini, A., et al. 2007, AJ, 133, 1658