The Extended Environment of M17: A Star Formation History
Matthew S. Povich, Ed Churchwell, John H. Bieging, Miju Kang, Barbara, A. Whitney, Crystal L. Brogan, Craig A. Kulesa, Martin Cohen, Brian L., Babler, Remy Indebetouw, Marilyn R. Meade, and Thomas P. Robitaille

TL;DR
This study investigates the star formation history of M17, revealing multiple waves of massive star formation triggered by expanding shell structures and providing a detailed catalog of young stellar objects in the region.
Contribution
The paper presents a new catalog of 96 candidate YSOs in M17, maps the shell structure associated with star formation, and offers insights into the triggered star formation processes in the region.
Findings
Identified 96 candidate YSOs with high reliability.
Mapped a large shell structure associated with M17.
Provided evidence for triggered star formation by shell expansion.
Abstract
M17 is one of the youngest and most massive nearby star-formation regions in the Galaxy. It features a bright H II region erupting as a blister from the side of a giant molecular cloud (GMC). Combining photometry from the Spitzer GLIMPSE survey with complementary infrared (IR) surveys, we identify candidate young stellar objects (YSOs) throughout a 1.5 deg x 1 deg field that includes the M17 complex. The long sightline through the Galaxy behind M17 creates significant contamination in our YSO sample from unassociated sources with similar IR colors. Removing contaminants, we produce a highly-reliable catalog of 96 candidate YSOs with a high probability of association with the M17 complex. We fit model spectral energy distributions to these sources and constrain their physical properties. Extrapolating the mass function of 62 intermediate-mass YSOs (M >3 Msun), we estimate that >1000…
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