Young Brown Dwarfs in the Core of the W3 Main Star-Forming Region
D.K. Ojha, M. Tamura, Y. Nakajima, H. Saito, A.K. Pandey, S.K. Ghosh,, K. Aoki

TL;DR
This study uses deep near-infrared observations to identify a rich population of very low-mass young stellar objects, including brown dwarfs, in the W3 Main star-forming region, revealing insights into its stellar mass distribution and formation processes.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed census of substellar objects in W3 Main, showing a higher brown dwarf to star ratio and evidence of mass segregation linked to star formation.
Findings
Detected a substantial population of brown dwarfs and very low-mass stars.
Found no cutoff in the mass function at the substellar limit.
Observed mass segregation likely related to star formation processes.
Abstract
We present the results of deep and high-resolution (FWHM ~ 0".35) JHK NIR observations with the Subaru telescope, to search for very low mass young stellar objects (YSOs) in the W3 Main star-forming region. The NIR survey covers an area of ~ 2.6 arcmin^2 with 10-sigma limiting magnitude exceeding 20 mag in the JHK bands. The survey is sensitive enough to provide unprecedented details in W3 IRS 5 region and reveals a census of the stellar population down to objects below the hydrogen-burning limit. We construct JHK color-color (CC) and J-H/J and H-K/K color-magnitude (CM) diagrams to identify very low luminosity YSOs and to estimate their masses. Based on these CC and CM diagrams, we identified a rich population of embedded YSO candidates with infrared excesses (Class I and Class II), associated with the W3 Main region. A large number of red sources (H-K > 2) have also been detected…
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