The spatial distribution of substellar objects in IC348 and the Orion Trapezium Cluster
M. S. N. Kumar, S. Schmeja

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatial distribution of stars and substellar objects in two clusters, finding that substellar objects are homogeneously distributed, supporting the hypothesis that they form as ejected stellar embryos.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that substellar objects are homogeneously distributed, consistent with their formation via ejection from star-forming regions.
Findings
Stars are clustered in both regions.
Substellar objects are homogeneously distributed.
Substellar objects are within the cluster limits, not significantly displaced.
Abstract
Aims: Some theoretical scenarios suggest the formation of brown dwarfs as ejected stellar embryos in star-forming clusters. Such a formation mechanism can result in different spatial distributions of stars and substellar objects. We aim to investigate the spatial structure of stellar and substellar objects in two well sampled and nearby embedded clusters, namely IC348 and the Orion Trapezium Cluster (OTC) to test this hypothesis. Methods:Deep near-infrared K-band data complete enough to sample the substellar population in IC348 and OTC are obtained from the literature. The spatial distribution of the K-band point sources is analysed using the Minimum Spanning Tree (MST) method. The Q parameter and the spanning trees are evaluated for stellar and substellar objects as a function of cluster core radius R. Results: The stellar population in both IC348 and OTC display a clustered…
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