A Panchromatic View OF NGC 602: Time-Resolved Star Formation with the Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes
Lynn Redding Carlson, Marta Sewilo, Margaret Meixner, Krista A., Romita, Barbara Whitney, Joseph L. Hora, M. Cignoni, E. Sabbi, A. Nota, M., Sirianni, L. J. Smith, K. Gordon, B. Babler, S. Bracker, J. S. Gallagher III,, M. Meade, K. Misselt, A. Pasquali, B. Shiao

TL;DR
This study combines optical and infrared data from Hubble, Spitzer, and other telescopes to analyze star formation in NGC 602, revealing young stellar populations, their properties, and a consistent star formation rate over time.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength catalog and analysis of star formation, including ages, masses, and evolutionary stages of YSOs in NGC 602, demonstrating a progression of star formation.
Findings
Approximately 565 PMS candidates identified.
Star formation rate estimated at 0.2-1.0 Msun/yr/kpc^2.
Star formation shows a progression from cluster center to cloud edge.
Abstract
We present the photometric catalogs for the star-forming cluster NGC 602 in the wing of the Small Magellanic Cloud covering a range of wavelengths from optical HST/ACS (F555W, F814W) and SMARTS/ANDICAM (V, I) to infrared (Spitzer/IRAC 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8 micron and MIPS 24 micron). Combining this with IRSF (InfraRed Survey Facility) near-infrared photometry (J, H, Ks), we compare the young main sequence (MS) and pre-main sequence (PMS) populations prominent in the optical with the current young stellar object (YSO) populations revealed by the infrared (IR). We analyze the MS and PMS population with isochrones in color-magnitude diagrams to derive ages and masses. The optical data reveal ~565 PMS candidates, low mass Stage III YSOs. We characterize ~40 YSOs by fitting their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) to a grid of models (Robitaille et al. 2007) to derive luminosities, masses…
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.
