Low-mass pre--main-sequence stars in the Magellanic Clouds
Dimitrios Gouliermis

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in detecting and characterizing low-mass pre-main-sequence stars in the Magellanic Clouds, highlighting how these findings extend our understanding of star formation beyond the Milky Way.
Contribution
It presents new insights into low-mass PMS stars in the Magellanic Clouds using Hubble data, overcoming observational challenges and expanding the extragalactic stellar IMF.
Findings
Detection of numerous low-mass PMS stars in the Magellanic Clouds
Extended the stellar IMF below a few solar masses in external galaxies
Highlighted limitations of single-epoch photometry for PMS star characterization
Abstract
[Abridged] The stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) suggests that sub-solar stars form in very large numbers. Most attractive places for catching low-mass star formation in the act are young stellar clusters and associations, still (half-)embedded in star-forming regions. The low-mass stars in such regions are still in their pre--main-sequence (PMS) evolutionary phase. The peculiar nature of these objects and the contamination of their samples by the evolved populations of the Galactic disk impose demanding observational techniques for the detection of complete numbers of PMS stars in the Milky Way. The Magellanic Clouds, the companion galaxies to our own, demonstrate an exceptional star formation activity. The low extinction and stellar field contamination in star-forming regions of these galaxies imply a more efficient detection of low-mass PMS stars than in the Milky Way, but their…
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