http://arxiv.org/abs/1612.02440
The primary sample of the Gaia Data Release 1 is the Tycho-Gaia Astrometric Solution (TGAS): $\approx$ 2 million Tycho-2 sources with improved parallaxes and proper motions relative to the initial catalog. This increased astrometric precision presents an opportunity to find new binary stars and moving groups. We search for high-confidence co-moving pairs of stars in TGAS by identifying pairs of stars consistent with having the same 3D velocity using a marginalized likelihood ratio test to discriminate candidate co-moving pairs from the field population. Although we perform some visualizations using (bias-corrected) inverse-parallax as a point-estimate of distance, the likelihood ratio is computed with a probabilistic model that includes the covariances of parallax and proper motions, and marginalizes the (unknown) true distances and 3D velocities of the stars. We find 13,085 co-moving star pairs among 10,606 unique stars with separations as large as 10 pc (our search limit). Some of these pairs form larger groups through mutual co-moving neighbors: many of these pair networks correspond to known open clusters and OB associations, but we also report the discovery of several new co-moving groups. Most surprisingly, we find a large number of very wide ($>1$ pc) separation co-moving star pairs, the number of which increases with increasing separation and cannot be explained purely by false-positive contamination. Our key result is a catalog of high-confidence co-moving pairs of stars in TGAS. We discuss the utility of this catalog for making dynamical inferences about the Galaxy, testing stellar atmosphere models, and validating chemical abundance measurements.
S. Oh, A. Price-Whelan, D. Hogg, et. al.
Fri, 9 Dec 16
41/62
Comments: submitted to AAS Journals; A web visualization of the result is available at this http URL
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