by Ann » Sat Jan 25, 2014 7:55 am
I also found your references interesting, geckzilla.
As a color commentator, the question that interests me most is this one: Why do most young clusters sport at least one red giant, while a few of them do not? As for clusters with red giants, check out
M6,
NGC 3293 and
the Jewel Box Cluster, NGC 4755. Examples of clusters with no red giants are
the Pleiades,
IC 2602 (also known as the Southern Pleiades) and possibly
M36, although there are yellow and red stars close to the latter.
This widefield picture shows two obvious clusters, M38 at top left (at about 11 o'clock) and M36 at bottom left, at about 7 o'clock. It is obvious that both clusters are young, but it is also obvious that M38 contains several red giants, whereas the core of M36 contains none. But there are several red stars at the outskirts of M36, and there are some bright red stars some distance away from M36 which may well be associated with the cluster.
Please note that the red stars are often at the outskirts of a young cluster. That is the case of M6, NGC 3293 and M36. In constellation Orion,
red supergiant Betelgeuse is also "at the outskirts " of the action.
Red supergiant Antares is more "centrally placed" at Upper Scorpius, though perhaps slightly at the outskirts after all. (Antares and Betelgeuse are not members of clusters, of course, but of associations.)
There are
no red giants in or around the Lagoon Nebula or in or around its "neighbour", the Trifid Nebula. Open cluster M21, not far from the Trifid Nebula, is an example of a young cluster with no red giants.
This picture of M21 shows some not so bright but very red objects in M21. Clearly they are nowhere near as bright as the brightest blue stars in the cluster. Is it possible that they are pre-main sequence stars, which are brighter and redder than the main sequence stars they will evolve into? Are they, for some reason, just dust-reddened? Could some of them be background objects? What are they?
Why do some young clusters contain bright red giant stars and others do not? That is the million dollar question.
Ann
I also found your references interesting, geckzilla.
As a color commentator, the question that interests me most is this one: Why do most young clusters sport at least one red giant, while a few of them do not? As for clusters with red giants, check out [url=http://www.sciencephoto.com/image/330775/350wm/R6140184-The_Butterfly_star_cluster_M6-SPL.jpg]M6[/url], [url=http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-A92asPH7LTM/Tatgi5Y8HzI/AAAAAAAAAAU/3KGODS6R65w/s1600/ProximaSur%2BNGC%2B3293_1600x1060.jpg]NGC 3293[/url] and [url=http://www.astronomynow.com/news/n0910/29ESO/widefield.jpg]the Jewel Box Cluster, NGC 4755[/url]. Examples of clusters with no red giants are [url=http://www.pleiade.org/images/uks018c_ns.jpg]the Pleiades[/url], [url=http://www.southernskyphoto.com/southern_sky/images/southern_pleiades_ic_2602.jpg]IC 2602 (also known as the Southern Pleiades)[/url] and possibly [url=http://astropixels.com/openclusters/images/M36-01z.jpg]M36[/url], although there are yellow and red stars close to the latter. [url=http://www.af9y.com/ic417.jpg]This widefield picture[/url] shows two obvious clusters, M38 at top left (at about 11 o'clock) and M36 at bottom left, at about 7 o'clock. It is obvious that both clusters are young, but it is also obvious that M38 contains several red giants, whereas the core of M36 contains none. But there are several red stars at the outskirts of M36, and there are some bright red stars some distance away from M36 which may well be associated with the cluster.
Please note that the red stars are often at the outskirts of a young cluster. That is the case of M6, NGC 3293 and M36. In constellation Orion, [url=http://www.constellation-guide.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/Orion-Constellation.jpg]red supergiant Betelgeuse is also "at the outskirts " of the action[/url]. [url=http://www.project-nightflight.net/print033_antares_region.jpg]Red supergiant Antares is more "centrally placed" at Upper Scorpius[/url], though perhaps slightly at the outskirts after all. (Antares and Betelgeuse are not members of clusters, of course, but of associations.)
There are [url=http://faculty.fortlewis.edu/hakes_c/observatory_website_images/M8_LRGBv_ps.jpg]no red giants in or around the Lagoon Nebula[/url] or in or around its "neighbour", the Trifid Nebula. Open cluster M21, not far from the Trifid Nebula, is an example of a young cluster with no red giants. [url=http://scienceblogs.com/startswithabang/files/2013/06/messier-21.jpg]This picture of M21[/url] shows some not so bright but very red objects in M21. Clearly they are nowhere near as bright as the brightest blue stars in the cluster. Is it possible that they are pre-main sequence stars, which are brighter and redder than the main sequence stars they will evolve into? Are they, for some reason, just dust-reddened? Could some of them be background objects? What are they?
Why do some young clusters contain bright red giant stars and others do not? That is the million dollar question.
Ann