The role of low-mass star clusters in massive star formation. The Orion Case
V. M. Rivilla, J. Martin-Pintado, I. Jimenez-Serra, A., Rodriguez-Franco

TL;DR
This study uses deep X-ray observations to analyze low-mass star distributions in Orion's massive star-forming regions, supporting the idea that dense low-mass clusters are crucial in massive star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed mapping of low-mass star densities and their spatial relation to massive stars in Orion, supporting a cluster-based formation scenario.
Findings
Low-mass stars cluster near massive star regions.
Stellar densities reach up to 10^6 stars per pc^3.
Evidence of a possible stellar merger in the OHC cluster.
Abstract
To distinguish between the different theories proposed to explain massive star formation, it is crucial to establish the distribution, the extinction, and the density of low-mass stars in massive star-forming regions. We analyze deep X-ray observations of the Orion massive star-forming region using the Chandra Orion Ultradeep Project (COUP) catalog. We studied the stellar distribution as a function of extinction, with cells of 0.03 pc x 0.03 pc, the typical size of protostellar cores. We derived stellar density maps and calculated cluster stellar densities. We found that low-mass stars cluster toward the three massive star-forming regions: the Trapezium Cluster (TC), the Orion Hot Core (OHC), and OMC1-S. We derived low-mass stellar densities of 10^{5} stars pc^{-3} in the TC and OMC1-S, and of 10^{6} stars pc^{-3} in the OHC. The close association between the low-mass star clusters with…
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