Radio and IR study of the massive star-forming region IRAS 16353-4636
P. Benaglia, M. Ribo, J.A. Combi, G.E. Romero, S. Chaty, B., Koribalski, I.F. Mirabel, L.F. Rodriguez, G. Bosch

TL;DR
This study combines radio, infrared, and spectroscopic data to characterize IRAS 16353-4636 as a protostellar cluster with diverse objects, including YSOs and non-thermal emission regions, shedding light on massive star formation processes.
Contribution
It provides a multi-wavelength analysis identifying a new protostellar cluster with distinct YSOs and outflow features, advancing understanding of massive star formation stages.
Findings
IRAS 16353-4636 is a protostellar cluster with multiple YSOs.
Detected non-thermal radio emission likely from an outflow terminal.
Identified three distinct sources within the cluster.
Abstract
Context. With the latest infrared surveys, the number of massive protostellar candidates has increased significantly. New studies have posed additional questions on important issues about the formation, evolution, and other phenomena related to them. Complementary to infrared data, radio observations are a good tool to study the nature of these objects, and to diagnose the formation stage. Aims. Here we study the far-infrared source IRAS 16353-4636 with the aim of understanding its nature and origin. In particular, we search for young stellar objects (YSOs), possible outflow structure, and the presence of non-thermal emission. Methods. Using high-resolution, multi-wavelength radio continuum data obtained with the Australia Telescope Compact Array, we image IRAS 16353-4636 and its environment from 1.4 to 19.6 GHz, and derive the distribution of the spectral index at maximum angular…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
