The Discovery of a Massive Cluster of Red Supergiants with GLIMPSE
Michael J. Alexander, Henry A. Kobulnicky, Dan P. Clemens, Katherine, Jameson, April Pinnick, Michael Pavel

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a massive, obscured Galactic star cluster containing multiple red supergiants, identified via mid-infrared imaging and spectroscopy, providing insights into recent star formation near the Galactic bar.
Contribution
The paper presents the first identification and characterization of a massive red supergiant cluster in the Milky Way using GLIMPSE survey data, revealing its properties and significance.
Findings
Contains at least 8 confirmed red supergiants
Estimated cluster mass of approximately 20,000 solar masses
Located near the end of the Galactic bar, indicating recent star formation
Abstract
We report the discovery of a previously unknown massive Galactic star cluster at l=29.22, b=-0.20. Identified visually in mid-IR images from the Spitzer GLIMPSE survey, the cluster contains at least 8 late-type supergiants, based on followup near-IR spectroscopy, and an additional 3-6 candidate supergiant embers having IR photometry consistent with a similar distance and reddening. The cluster lies at a local minimum in the 13-CO column density and 8 micron emission. We interpret this feature as a hole carved by the energetic winds of the evolving massive stars. The 13-CO hole seen in molecular maps at V_LSR ~95 km/s corresponds to near/far kinematic distances of 6.1/8.7+/-1 kpc. We calculate a mean spectrophotometric distance of 7.0^+3.7_-2.4 kpc, broadly consistent with the kinematic distances inferred. This location places it near the northern end of the Galactic bar. For the mean…
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