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Post Info TOPIC: NGC 6231


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Posts: 131433
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RE: NGC 6231
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Title: The highly ionized, high velocity gas in NGC 6231
Author: Derck Massa

It is well known that clusters of massive stars are influenced by the presence of strong winds, that they are sources of diffuse X-rays from shocked gas, and that this gas can be vented into the surrounding region or the halo through the champagne effect. However, the details of how these different environments interact and evolve are far from complete. This paper attributes the broad C IV 1500 absorption features (extending to -1900 \kms) that are seen in the spectra of main sequence B stars in NGC 6231 to gas in the cluster environment and not the B stars themselves. It is shown that the presence of a WC star, WR 79, in the cluster makes this gas detectable because its wind enriches the cluster gas with carbon. Given the available data, it is not clear whether the absorbing gas is simply the far wind of WR 79 or a collective cluster wind enriched by carbon from the wind of WR 79. If it is simply due to the wind, then this wind must flow, unimpeded for more than 2 pc, suggesting that the inner region of the cluster is nearly devoid of obstructing material. If it is actually a collective wind from the cluster, then we could be witnessing an important stage of galactic feedback. In either case, the observations provide a unique and significant piece to the puzzle of how massive, open clusters evolve.

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NGC 6231 (also OCL 997, Melotte 153, Collinder 315 and ESO 332-SC6) is a magnitude +2.6 open cluster located 5900 light-years away in the constellation Scorpius. The cluster is near the star Zeta Scorpii, Zeta1 (HR 6262) which is a member of the star cluster (The brighter optical binary partner, Zeta2 (HR 6271), is only 150 ly from Earth and is not a cluster member).
The cluster is embedded in a large emission nebulae and composed of ~120 stars spread over 15 arc minutes.

The cluster was discovered by the Italian astronomer Giovanni Batista Hodierna with probably a 1-inch 20x Galilean telescope in the castle of his patron Carlo Tomasi et Caro, in Palma di Montechiaro sometime before 1654. Hodierna included the star cluster in his 1654 publication "De systemate orbis cometici; deque admirandis coeli characteribus"
The cluster was rediscovered by Edmund Halley in 1678. It was too far south to be found by Charles Messier.

Right ascension 16h 54m 12s, Declination -41° 48' 00"

This cluster is estimated about 3.2 million years old, and is approaching the Solar System at 22 km/s. The cluster belongs to the young Scorpius OB1 association.
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