A Chandra Observation of the Obscured Star-Forming Complex W40
Michael A. Kuhn (1), Konstantin V. Getman (1), Eric D. Feigelson (1),, Bo Reipurth (2), Steven A. Rodney (3), Gordon P. Garmire (1) ((1) Penn State, University, (2) University of Hawaii, (3) Johns Hopkins University)

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations to analyze the obscured young stellar cluster W40, revealing its population, structure, and star formation activity despite high obscuration.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed X-ray analysis of W40, estimating its distance, population, and spatial structure, and identifies ongoing star formation and dust features.
Findings
Supports a 600 pc distance for W40.
At least 600 stars down to 0.1 solar masses.
Presence of a dust lane and ongoing star formation.
Abstract
The young stellar cluster illuminating the W40 H II region, one of the nearest massive star forming regions, has been observed with the ACIS detector on board the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Due to its high obscuration, this is a poorly-studied stellar cluster with only a handful of bright stars visible in the optical band, including three OB stars identified as primary excitation sources. We detect 225 X-ray sources, of which 85% are confidently identified as young stellar members of the region. Two potential distances of the cluster, 260 pc and 600 pc, are used in the paper. Supposing the X-ray luminosity function to be universal, it supports a 600 pc distance as a lower limit for W40 and a total population of at least 600 stars down to 0.1 Mo under the assumption of a coeval population with a uniform obscuration. In fact, there is strong spatial variation in Ks-band-excess disk…
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