The LMC's Top 250: Classification of the Most Luminous Compact 8 micron Sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Astron.J.136:1221-1241,2008 To ascertain the nature of the brightest compact mid-infrared sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), we have applied an updated version of the Buchanan et al. (2006) 2MASS-MSX color classification system, which is based on the results of Spitzer Space Telescope spec...
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Zusammenfassung: | Astron.J.136:1221-1241,2008 To ascertain the nature of the brightest compact mid-infrared sources in the
Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), we have applied an updated version of the
Buchanan et al. (2006) 2MASS-MSX color classification system, which is based on
the results of Spitzer Space Telescope spectroscopy, to a mid-infrared (8
micron) flux-limited sample of 250 LMC objects for which 2MASS and MSX
photometry is available. The resulting 2MASS-MSX ("JHK8") color-based
classifications of these sources, which constitute the most mid-IR-luminous
objects in the LMC, were augmented, cross-checked, and corrected where
necessary via a variety of independent means, such that only 47 sources retain
tentative classifications and only 10 sources cannot be classified at all. The
sample is found to consist primarily of carbon-rich AGB stars (~35%), red
supergiants (~18%), and compact H II regions (~30%), with additional, small
populations of oxygen-rich AGB stars (~4%), dusty, early-type emission-line
stars (~3%), and foreground, O-rich AGB stars in the Milky Way (~3%). The very
large ratio of C-rich to O-rich objects among the luminous and heavily
dust-enshrouded AGB stars in our LMC IR source sample is consistent with the
hypothesis that carbon stars form easily in lower metallicity environments. We
demonstrate that very luminous C-rich and O-rich AGB stars and red supergiants,
identified here primarily on the basis of their JHK8 colors, also appear as
distinct clusters in Spitzer IRAC/MIPS color-color diagrams. Thus, in
principle, the IRS-based IR photometric classification techniques applied here
to the LMC can be applied to any external galaxy whose most luminous IR point
sources are detectable and resolvable by 2MASS and Spitzer. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/0703584 |