A New Galactic Wolf-Rayet Star in Centaurus
A. Roman-Lopes

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a new Wolf-Rayet star in Centaurus, characterizes its properties, and suggests it is part of a previously unknown stellar cluster based on infrared observations.
Contribution
It introduces the first identification of a Wolf-Rayet star in Centaurus and proposes a new star cluster nearby based on infrared imaging analysis.
Findings
Detected a new Wolf-Rayet star (WR60a) in Centaurus.
Estimated the star's distance and extinction using infrared spectra.
Identified a potential new star cluster near WR60a.
Abstract
In this work I communicate the detection of a new Galactic Wolf-Rayet star (WR60a) in Centaurus. The H- and K-band spectra of WR60a, show strong carbon near-infrared emission lines, characteristic of Wolf-Rayet stars of the WC5-7 sub-type. Adopting mean absolute magnitude M and mean intrinsic () and () colours, it was found that WR60a suffer a mean visual extinction of 3.81.3 magnitudes, being located at a probable heliocentric distance of 5.20.8 Kpc, which for the related Galactic longitude (l=312) puts this star probably in the Carina-Sagittarius arm at about 5.9 kpc from the Galactic center. I searched for clusters in the vicinity of WR60a, and in principle found no previously known clusters in a search radius region of several tens arc-minutes. The detection of a well isolated WR star induced us to seek for some still unknown cluster, somewhere in the…
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