Multiple episodes of star formation in the CN15/16/17 molecular complex
M. Gennaro (1), A. Bik (1), W. Brandner (1), A. Stolte (2), B. Rochau, (1), H. Beuther (1), D. Gouliermis (1,3), J. Tackenberg (1), N. Kudryavtseva, (1), B. Hussmann (2), F. Schuller (4), Th. Henning (1) ((1) MPIA, Heidelberg,, (2) AIfA, Bonn, (3) ITA-ZAH, Heidelberg, (4) ESO

TL;DR
This study investigates the CN15/16/17 molecular complex, revealing multiple episodes of star formation and correcting its distance estimate, which impacts understanding of its star-forming activity and stellar content.
Contribution
The paper provides new spectroscopic and photometric data that revise the distance and stellar content of the region, demonstrating multiple star formation episodes and refining the region's star formation history.
Findings
Confirmed presence of early B-type stars
Derived a spectro-photometric distance of ~1.2 kpc
Estimated cluster masses of ~170 and 275 solar masses
Abstract
We have started a campaign to identify massive star clusters inside bright molecular bubbles towards the Galactic Center. The CN15/16/17 molecular complex is the first example of our study. The region is characterized by the presence of two young clusters, DB10 and DB11, visible in the NIR, an ultra-compact HII region identified in the radio, several young stellar objects visible in the MIR, a bright diffuse nebulosity at 8\mu m coming from PAHs and sub-mm continuum emission revealing the presence of cold dust. Given its position on the sky (l=0.58, b=-0.85) and its kinematic distance of ~7.5 kpc, the region was thought to be a very massive site of star formation in proximity of the CMZ. The cluster DB11 was estimated to be as massive as 10^4 M_sun. However the region's properties were known only through photometry and its kinematic distance was very uncertain given its location at the…
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