The Spitzer Survey of Interstellar Clouds in the Gould Belt. III. A Multi-Wavelength View of Corona Australis
Dawn E. Peterson, Alessio Caratti o Garatti, Tyler L. Bourke, Jan, Forbrich, Robert A. Gutermuth, Jes K. Jorgensen, Lori E. Allen, Brian M., Patten, Michael M. Dunham, Paul M. Harvey, Bruno Merin, Nicholas L. Chapman,, Lucas A. Cieza, Tracy L. Huard, Claudia Knez, Brian Prager

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations, including Spitzer data, to analyze star formation, YSO populations, clustering, and outflows in the Corona Australis region, revealing new candidates and detailed outflow dynamics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of the Corona Australis star-forming region, identifying new YSO candidates, analyzing clustering, and studying outflows and jets with detailed proper motion data.
Findings
116 YSO candidates identified, including 12 new ones.
Main cluster core is elongated with a radius of 0.59 pc.
Detection of precessing jets and outflows with proper motions.
Abstract
We present Spitzer Space Telescope IRAC and MIPS observations of a 0.85 deg^2 field including the Corona Australis (CrA) star-forming region. At a distance of 130 pc, CrA is one of the closest regions known to be actively forming stars, particularly within its embedded association, the Coronet. Using the Spitzer data, we identify 51 young stellar objects (YSOs) in CrA which include sources in the well-studied Coronet cluster as well as distributed throughout the molecular cloud. Twelve of the YSOs discussed are new candidates, one of which is located in the Coronet. Known YSOs retrieved from the literature are also added to the list, and a total of 116 candidate YSOs in CrA are compiled. Based on these YSO candidates, the star formation rate is computed to be 12 M_o Myr^-1, similar to that of the Lupus clouds. A clustering analysis was also performed, finding that the main cluster core,…
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