An Infrared Census of Star Formation in the Horsehead Nebula
Brendan P. Bowler, William H. Waller, S. Thomas Megeath, Brian M., Patten, and Motohide Tamura

TL;DR
This study uses infrared observations to identify young stars in the Horsehead Nebula, providing insights into star formation processes and the potential influence of radiation-driven triggering.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed infrared census of star formation in the Horsehead Nebula, highlighting the spatial distribution and characteristics of young stars and assessing triggered star formation.
Findings
Three bona fide young stars identified
Two protostars at the irradiated tip support RDI model
No evidence for sequential star formation nearby
Abstract
At ~ 400 pc, the Horsehead Nebula (B33) is the closest radiatively-sculpted pillar to the Sun, but the state and extent of star formation in this structure is not well understood. We present deep near-infrared (IRSF/SIRIUS JHKs) and mid-infrared (Spitzer/IRAC) observations of the Horsehead Nebula in order to characterize the star forming properties of this region and to assess the likelihood of triggered star formation. Infrared color-color and color-magnitude diagrams are used to identify young stars based on infrared excess emission and positions to the right of the Zero-Age Main Sequence, respectively. Of the 45 sources detected at both near- and mid-infrared wavelengths, three bona fide and five candidate young stars are identified in this 7' by 7' region. Two bona fide young stars have flat infrared SEDs and are located at the western irradiated tip of the pillar. The spatial…
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