Star Formation in the Extreme Outer Galaxy: Digel Cloud 2 Clusters
Chikako Yasui, Naoto Kobayashi (IoA, University of Tokyo), Alan T., Tokunaga (IfA, University of Hawaii), Hiroshi Terada, and Masao Saito (NAOJ)

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation in the extreme outer Galaxy by analyzing two embedded clusters in Cloud 2, revealing similar properties despite different star formation modes, and suggesting a common triggering mechanism like a supernova remnant.
Contribution
First detailed comparison of star formation properties in the EOG with those in the solar neighborhood using deep near-infrared imaging.
Findings
Both clusters have similar KLFs and IMFs.
Star formation efficiencies are around 10%.
Clusters likely triggered by the same supernova remnant.
Abstract
As a first step for studying star formation in the extreme outer Galaxy (EOG), we obtained deep near-infrared images of two embedded clusters at the northern and southern CO peaks of Cloud 2, which is one of the most distant star forming regions in the outer Galaxy (galactic radius R_g ~ 19 kpc). With high spatial resolution (FWHM ~ 0".35) and deep imaging (K ~ 21 mag) with the IRCS imager at the Subaru telescope, we detected cluster members with a mass detection limit of < 0.1 M_{sun}, which is well into the substellar regime. These high quality data enables a comparison of EOG to those in the solar neighborhood on the same basis for the first time. Before interpreting the photometric result, we have first constructed the NIR color-color diagram (dwarf star track, classical T Tauri star (CTTS) locus, reddening law) in the Mauna Kea Observatory filter system and also for the low…
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