Looking for Obscured Young Star Clusters in NGC 1313
Using recently acquired Hubble Space Telescope NIR observations ( J , Pa β , and H bands) of the nearby galaxy NGC 1313, we investigate the timescales required by a young star cluster to emerge from its natal cloud. We search for extincted star clusters, potentially embedded in their natal cloud as...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Astrophysical journal 2021-03, Vol.909 (2), p.121 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Using recently acquired Hubble Space Telescope NIR observations (
J
, Pa
β
, and
H
bands) of the nearby galaxy NGC 1313, we investigate the timescales required by a young star cluster to emerge from its natal cloud. We search for extincted star clusters, potentially embedded in their natal cloud as either (1) compact sources in regions with high H
α
/Pa
β
extinctions or (2) compact H
ii
regions that appear as point-like sources in the Pa
β
emission map. The NUV–optical–NIR photometry of the candidate clusters is used to derive their ages, masses, and extinctions via a least-
χ
2
spectral energy distribution broad- and narrowband fitting process. The 100 clusters in the final samples have masses in the range
and moderate extinctions,
E
(
B
−
V
) ≲ 1.0 mag. Focusing on the young clusters (0–6 Myr), we derive a weak correlation between extinction and age of the clusters. Almost half of the clusters have low extinctions,
E
(
B
−
V
) < 0.25 mag, already at very young ages (≤3 Myr), suggesting that dust is quickly removed from clusters. A stronger correlation is found between the morphology of the nebular emission (compact, partial or absent, both in H
α
and Pa
β
) and cluster age. Relative fractions of clusters associated with a specific nebular morphology are used to estimate the typical timescales for clearing the natal gas cloud, resulting in between 3 and 5 Myr, ∼1 Myr older than what was estimated from NUV–optical-based cluster studies. This difference hints at a bias for optical-only-based studies, which James Webb Space Telescope will address in the coming years. |
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ISSN: | 0004-637X 1538-4357 1538-4357 |
DOI: | 10.3847/1538-4357/abe0b5 |