Star formation and disk properties in Pismis 24
M. Fang, R. van Boekel, R. R. King, Th. Henning, J. Bouwman, Y. Doi,, Y. K. Okamoto, V. Roccatagliata, and A. Sicilia-Aguilar

TL;DR
This study examines young stars and their disks in Pismis 24, revealing rapid disk dissipation influenced by massive stars, and providing new insights into cluster properties and star formation processes.
Contribution
It offers a revised distance, identifies new clusters, and analyzes disk dissipation mechanisms in Pismis 24, highlighting the impact of massive stars on disk evolution.
Findings
Median age of cluster members is 1 Myr.
Disk frequency is about 30%, lower near massive stars.
Disks dissipate roughly twice as fast in clusters with extremely massive stars.
Abstract
(abridged) We investigate the properties of young stars and their disks in the NGC 6357 complex, concentrating on the most massive star cluster within the complex: Pismis 24. We discover two new young clusters in the NGC 6357 complex. We give a revised distance estimate for Pismis 24 of 1.7+-0.2 kpc. We find that the massive star Pis 24-18 is a binary system, with the secondary being the main X-ray source of the pair. We derive the cluster mass function and find that up to the completeness limit at low masses it agrees well with the IMF of the Trapezium cluster. We derive a median age of 1 Myr for the Pismis 24 cluster members. We find five proplyds in HST archival imaging of the cluster, four of which are newly found. In all cases the proplyd tails are pointing directly away from the massive star system Pis 24-1. One proplyd shows a second tail, pointing away from Pis 24-2, suggesting…
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