The Spitzer Survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud: Discovery of Embedded Protostars in the HII Region NGC 346
Joshua D. Simon (Caltech), Alberto D. Bolatto (UC Berkeley), Barbara, A. Whitney (Space Science Institute), Thomas P. Robitaille (SUPA, St., Andrews), Ronak Y. Shah (Boston University), David Makovoz (Spitzer Science, Center), Snezana Stanimirovic (Wisconsin)

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer observations to identify and classify young stellar objects in the SMC's N66 region, revealing a significant population of embedded protostars and providing insights into star formation in low-metallicity environments.
Contribution
First large-scale classification of YSOs in another galaxy using Spitzer SEDs, identifying 111 YSOs and establishing criteria for their selection.
Findings
Identified at least 61 YSOs with stellar masses 2-17 Msun
Half of the YSOs are Stage II protostars
Evidence of primordial mass segregation in N66
Abstract
We use Spitzer Space Telescope observations from the Spitzer Survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud (S3MC) to study the young stellar content of N66, the largest and brightest HII region in the SMC. In addition to large numbers of normal stars, we detect a significant population of bright, red infrared sources that we identify as likely to be young stellar objects (YSOs). We use spectral energy distribution (SED) fits to classify objects as ordinary (main sequence or red giant) stars, asymptotic giant branch stars, background galaxies, and YSOs. This represents the first large-scale attempt at blind source classification based on Spitzer SEDs in another galaxy. We firmly identify at least 61 YSOs, with another 50 probable YSOs; only one embedded protostar in the SMC was reported in the literature prior to the S3MC. We present color selection criteria that can be used to identify a…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
