Spitzer observations of NGC2264: The nature of the disk population
P. S. Teixeira, C. J. Lada, M. Marengo, E. A. Lada

TL;DR
This study uses Spitzer and ground-based data to analyze the star formation history and disk evolution in the young cluster NGC2264, revealing multiple star-forming episodes and distinct disk evolutionary paths.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of disk populations and star formation history in NGC2264, highlighting multiple episodes and two main disk evolution pathways.
Findings
NGC2264 has a population of approximately 1436 members.
The cluster experienced more than one star-forming event.
Two distinct disk evolution pathways are identified: homologous and radially differential.
Abstract
NGC2264 is a young cluster with a rich circumstellar disk population which makes it an ideal target for studying the evolution of stellar clusters. Our goal is to study its star formation history and to analyse the primordial disk evolution of its members. The study presented is based on data obtained with Spitzer IRAC and MIPS, combined with deep NIR ground-based FLAMINGOS imaging and previously published optical data. We build NIR dust extinction maps of the molecular cloud associated with the cluster, and determine it to have a mass of 2.1x10^3Msun above an Av of 7mag. Using a differential K_s-band luminosity function of the cluster, we estimate the size of its population to be 1436242 members. The star formation efficiency is ~25%. We identify the disk population: (i) optically thick inner disks, (ii) anaemic inner disks, and (iii) disks with inner holes, or transition disks.…
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