Pre-main-sequence isochrones -- II. Revising star and planet formation timescales
Cameron P. M. Bell, Tim Naylor, N. J. Mayne, R. D. Jeffries, and S. P., Littlefair

TL;DR
This study revises the ages of young star-forming regions, indicating they are older than previously thought, which impacts our understanding of star and planet formation timescales.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new age determination method using semi-empirical isochrones, providing more accurate ages for star-forming regions and confirming longer disc and Class I lifetimes.
Findings
Revised ages are up to twice as old as previous estimates.
Longer circumstellar disc survival (~10-12 Myr).
Extended Class I lifetime (~1 Myr).
Abstract
We have derived ages for 13 young (<30 Myr) star-forming regions and find they are up to a factor two older than the ages typically adopted in the literature. This result has wide-ranging implications, including that circumstellar discs survive longer (~10-12 Myr) and that the average Class I lifetime is greater (~1 Myr) than currently believed. For each star-forming region we derived two ages from colour-magnitude diagrams. First we fitted models of the evolution between the zero-age main-sequence and terminal-age main-sequence to derive a homogeneous set of main-sequence ages, distances and reddenings with statistically meaningful uncertainties. Our second age for each star-forming region was derived by fitting pre-main-sequence stars to new semi-empirical model isochrones. For the first time (for a set of clusters younger than 50 Myr) we find broad agreement between these two ages,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
