Isolated OB Associations in Stripped HI Gas Clouds
J. K. Werk (1), M. E. Putman (1), G. R. Meurer (2), M. S. Oey (1), E., V. Ryan-Weber (3), R. C. Kennicutt Jr. (3), and K. C. Freeman (4) ((1), University of Michigan (2) The Johns Hopkins University (3) Institute of, Astronomy (4) Australian National University)

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes young OB star associations in stripped HI gas clouds far from NGC 1533's main disk, revealing star formation in galaxy outskirts similar to that in galactic disks.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of isolated OB associations in intergalactic HI gas, linking star formation in galaxy outskirts to processes in tidal debris.
Findings
OB associations have masses from 600 to 7000 solar masses.
Ages of associations range from 2 to 6 million years.
Associations are likely dispersing and may be first-generation stars in the HI ring.
Abstract
HST ACS/HRC images in UV (F250W), V (F555W), and I (F814W) resolve three isolated OB associations that lie up to 30 kpc from the stellar disk of the S0 galaxy NGC 1533. Previous narrow-band Halpha imaging and optical spectroscopy showed these objects as unresolved intergalactic HII regions having Halpha luminosities consistent with single early-type O stars. These young stars lie in stripped HI gas with column densities ranging from 1.5 - 2.5 * 10^20 cm^-2 and velocity dispersions near 30 km s^-1. Using the HST broadband colors and magnitudes along with previously-determined Halpha luminosities, we place limits on the masses and ages of each association, considering the importance of stochastic effects for faint (M_V >-8) stellar populations. The upper limits to their stellar masses range from 600 M_sun to 7000 M_sun, and ages range from 2 - 6 Myrs. This analysis includes an updated…
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