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Open clusters (OCs) act as key probes that can be leveraged to constrain the formation and evolution of the Milky Way (MW)’s disk, as each has a unique chemical fingerprint and well-constrained age. Significant Galactic dynamic interactions can leave imprints on the orbital properties of OCs, allowing us to use the present-day properties of long-lived OCs to reconstruct the MW’s dynamic history. To explore these changes, we identify OC analogs in FIRE-2 simulations of MW-mass galaxies. For this work, we focus on one particular FIRE-2 OC, which we identify as an analog to the old, subsolar, distant, and high-Galactic-latitude MW OC, Berkeley 20. Our simulated OC resides ∼6 kpc from the galactic center and ultimately reaches a height kpc from the galactic disk, similar to Berkeley 20. We trace the simulated cluster’s orbital and environmental history, identifying key perturbative episodes, including (1) an interaction with a gas overdensity in a spiral arm that prompts an outward migration event and (2) a substantial interaction with a Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy–mass satellite that causes significant orbital modification. Our simulated OC shows significant resilience to disruption during both its outward migration and the satellite-driven heating event that causes subsequent inward migration. Ultimately, we find these two key processes—migration and satellite heating—are essential to include when assessing OC orbital dynamics in the era of Gaia.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 8, 2026
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Mészáros, Szabolcs; Jofré, Paula; Johnson, Jennifer A; Bird, Jonathan C; Bovy, Jo; Casey, Andrew R; Chanamé, Julio; Cunha, Katia; De_Lee, Nathan; Frinchaboy, Peter; et al (, The Astronomical Journal)Abstract The goal of this paper is to describe the science verification of Milky Way Mapper (MWM) APOGEE Stellar Parameter and Chemical Abundances Pipeline (ASPCAP) data products published in Data Release 19 (DR19) of the fifth phase of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-V). We compare MWM ASPCAP atmospheric parametersTeff, logg, 24 abundances of 21 elements (carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen have multiple sources for deriving their abundance values) and their uncertainties determined from Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE) spectrograph spectra with those of the literature and evaluate their accuracy and precision. We also test the zero-point calibration of thevradderived by the APOGEE Data Reduction Pipeline. This data release contains ASPCAP parameters for 964,989 stars, including all APOGEE-2 targets expanded with new observations of 336,511 stars from the Apache Point Observatory observed until 2023 July 4. Overall, the newTeffvalues show excellent agreement with the IRFM scale, while the surface gravities exhibit slight systematic offsets compared to asteroseisimic gravities. The estimated precision ofTeffis between 50 and 70 K for giants and 70–100 K for dwarfs, while surface gravities are measured with a precision of 0.07–0.09 dex for giants. We achieve an estimated precision of 0.02–0.04 dex for multiple elements, including metallicity,α, Mg, and Si, while the precision of at least 10 elements is better than 0.1 dex.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 17, 2026
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