SIMBAD references

2023AJ....165....3K - Astron. J., 165, 3 (2023/January-0)

Spectroscopic Confirmation of a Population of Isolated, Intermediate-mass Young Stellar Objects.

KUHN M.A., SABER R., POVICH M.S., DE SOUZA R.S., KRONE-MARTINS A., ISHIDA E.E.O., ZUCKER C., BENJAMIN R.A., HILLENBRAND L.A., CASTRO-GINARD A., ZHOU X. (The COIN Collaboration)

Abstract (from CDS):

Wide-field searches for young stellar objects (YSOs) can place useful constraints on the prevalence of clustered versus distributed star formation. The Spitzer/IRAC Candidate YSO (SPICY) catalog is one of the largest compilations of such objects (∼120,000 candidates in the Galactic midplane). Many SPICY candidates are spatially clustered, but, perhaps surprisingly, approximately half the candidates appear spatially distributed. To better characterize this unexpected population and confirm its nature, we obtained Palomar/DBSP spectroscopy for 26 of the optically bright (G < 15 mag) “isolated” YSO candidates. We confirm the YSO classifications of all 26 sources based on their positions on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, H and Ca II line emission from over half the sample, and robust detection of infrared excesses. This implies a contamination rate of <10% for SPICY stars that meet our optical selection criteria. Spectral types range from B4 to K3, with A-type stars being the most common. Spectral energy distributions, diffuse interstellar bands, and Galactic extinction maps indicate moderate-to-high extinction. Stellar masses range from ∼1 to 7 M, and the estimated accretion rates, ranging from 3 × 10–8 to 3 × 10–7M yr–1, are typical for YSOs in this mass range. The 3D spatial distribution of these stars, based on Gaia astrometry, reveals that the “isolated” YSOs are not evenly distributed in the Solar neighborhood but are concentrated in kiloparsec-scale dusty Galactic structures that also contain the majority of the SPICY YSO clusters. Thus, the processes that produce large Galactic star-forming structures may yield nearly as many distributed as clustered YSOs.

Abstract Copyright: © 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Journal keyword(s): Herbig Ae/Be stars - T Tauri stars - Spectroscopy - Star formation - Young stellar objects

VizieR on-line data: <Available at CDS (J/AJ/165/3): table2.dat b100086.dat b103533.dat b104101.dat b105586.dat b105733.dat b105879.dat b106482.dat b106859.dat b107233.dat b108375.dat b108400.dat b108560.dat b111557.dat b111583.dat b113327.dat b115897.dat b116344.dat b116390.dat b116475.dat b117231.dat b89018.dat b89954.dat b90918.dat b90923.dat b93027.dat b98558.dat r100086.dat r103533.dat r104101.dat r105586.dat r105733.dat r105879.dat r106482.dat r106859.dat r107233.dat r108375.dat r108400.dat r108560.dat r111557.dat r111583.dat r113327.dat r115897.dat r116344.dat r116390.dat r116475.dat r117231.dat r89018.dat r89954.dat r90918.dat r90923.dat r93027.dat r98558.dat>

Simbad objects: 45

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:2023AJ....165....3K and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu