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VISION - Vienna survey in Orion: III. Young stellar objects in Orion A

  • Josefa E. Großschedl (Corresponding author)
  • , João Alves
  • , Paula S. Teixeira
  • , Hervé Bouy
  • , Jan Forbrich
  • , Charles J. Lada
  • , Stefan Meingast
  • , Álvaro Hacar
  • , Joana Ascenso
  • , Christine Ackerl
  • , Birgit Hasenberger
  • , Rainer Köhler
  • , Karolina Kubiak
  • , Irati Larreina
  • , Lorenz Linhardt
  • , Marco Lombardi
  • , Torsten Möller

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

We have extended and refined the existing young stellar object (YSO) catalogs for the Orion A molecular cloud, the closest massive star-forming region to Earth. This updated catalog is driven by the large spatial coverage (18.3 deg2, ∼950 pc2), seeing limited resolution (∼0.7″), and sensitivity (Ks < 19 mag) of the ESO-VISTA near-infrared survey of the Orion A cloud (VISION). Combined with archival mid- to far-infrared data, the VISTA data allow for a refined and more robust source selection. We estimate that among previously known protostars and pre-main-sequence stars with disks, source contamination levels (false positives) are at least ∼6.4% and ∼2.3%, respectively, mostly due to background galaxies and nebulosities. We identify 274 new YSO candidates using VISTA/Spitzer based selections within previously analyzed regions, and VISTA/WISE based selections to add sources in the surroundings, beyond previously analyzed regions. The WISE selection method recovers about 59% of the known YSOs in Orion A’s low-mass star-forming part L1641, which shows what can be achieved by the all-sky WISE survey in combination with deep near-infrared data in regions without the influence of massive stars. The new catalog contains 2980 YSOs, which were classified based on the de-reddened mid-infrared spectral index into 188 protostars, 185 flat-spectrum sources, and 2607 pre-main-sequence stars with circumstellar disks. We find a statistically significant difference in the spatial distribution of the three evolutionary classes with respect to regions of high dust column-density, confirming that flat-spectrum sources are at a younger evolutionary phase compared to Class IIs, and are not a sub-sample seen at particular viewing angles.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberA149
Number of pages38
JournalAstronomy & Astrophysics
Volume622
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Feb 2019

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 103003 Astronomy
  • 103004 Astrophysics

Keywords

  • astro-ph.SR
  • astro-ph.GA
  • methods: observational
  • stars: formation
  • Stars: pre-main sequence
  • ISM: Clouds
  • Infrared: stars
  • methods: statistical
  • POPULATION
  • HERBIG-HARO OBJECTS
  • PROTOPLANETARY DISKS
  • MOLECULAR CLOUD
  • infrared: stars
  • PROTOSTELLAR ENVELOPES
  • stars: pre-main sequence
  • SPECTRAL ENERGY-DISTRIBUTIONS
  • STAR-FORMATION RATES
  • SPITZER CENSUS
  • 2-DIMENSIONAL RADIATIVE-TRANSFER
  • CIRCUMSTELLAR DISKS
  • ISM: clouds
  • Methods: statistical
  • Stars: formation
  • Methods: observational

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