Protoplanetary Disk Evolution around the Triggered Star Forming Region Cepheus B
Konstantin V. Getman (1), Eric D. Feigelson (1), Kevin L. Luhman (1),, Aurora Sicilia-Aguilar (2), Junfeng Wang (3), Gordon P. Garmire (1) ((1) Penn, State, (2) Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie, (3) CfA)

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer and Chandra observations to analyze protoplanetary disk evolution and triggered star formation in Cepheus B, revealing a gradient of young stars supporting the radiation driven implosion model.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive combined X-ray and infrared analysis of the region, confirming triggered star formation and disk evolution patterns.
Findings
Discovery of a spatio-temporal gradient of young stars.
Confirmation of the radiation driven implosion model.
Disk fractions and properties align with other star-forming regions.
Abstract
The Cepheus B (CepB) molecular cloud and a portion of the nearby CepOB3b OB association, one of the most active regions of star formation within 1 kpc, have been observed with the IRAC detector on board the Spitzer Space Telescope. The goals are to study protoplanetary disk evolution and processes of sequential triggered star formation in the region. Out of ~400 pre-main sequence (PMS) stars selected with an earlier Chandra X-ray Observatory observation, 95% are identified with mid-infrared sources and most of these are classified as diskless or disk-bearing stars. The discovery of the additional >200 IR-excess low-mass members gives a combined Chandra+Spitzer PMS sample complete down to 0.5 Mo outside of the cloud, and somewhat above 1 Mo in the cloud. Analyses of the nearly disk-unbiased combined Chandra+Spitzer selected stellar sample give several results. Our major finding is a…
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