Deep Near‐Infrared Observations of the W3 Main Star‐forming Region

  • Ojha D
  • Tamura M
  • Nakajima Y
  • et al.
62Citations
Citations of this article
14Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

We present a deep JHKs-band imaging survey of the W3 Main star forming region, using the near-infrared camera, SIRIUS, mounted on the University of Hawaii 2.2m telescope. The near-infrared survey covers an area of ~ 24 sq. arcmin with 10 sigma limiting magnitudes of ~ 19.0, 18.1, and 17.3 in J, H, and Ks-band, respectively. We construct JHK color-color and J/J-H and K/H-K color-magnitude diagrams to identify young stellar objects and estimate their masses. Based on these color-color and color-magnitude diagrams, a rich population of YSOs is identified which is associated with the W3 Main region. A large number of previously unreported red sources (H-K > 2) have also been detected around W3 Main. We argue that these red stars are most probably pre-main sequence stars with intrinsic color excesses. We find that the slope of the Ks-band luminosity function of W3 Main is lower than the typical values reported for the young embedded clusters. The derived slope of the KLF is the same as that found by Megeath et al. (1996), from which analysis by Megeath et al. indicates that the W3 Main region has an age in the range of 0.3--1 Myr. Based on the comparison between models of pre-main sequence stars with the observed color-magnitude diagram we find that the stellar population in W3 Main is primarily composed of low mass pre-main sequence stars. We also report the detection of isolated young stars with large infrared excesses which are most probably in their earliest evolutionary phases.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Ojha, D. K., Tamura, M., Nakajima, Y., Fukagawa, M., Sugitani, K., Nagashima, C., … Ogura, K. (2004). Deep Near‐Infrared Observations of the W3 Main Star‐forming Region. The Astrophysical Journal, 608(2), 797–808. https://doi.org/10.1086/420876

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free