RCW36: characterizing the outcome of massive star formation
L. E. Ellerbroek, A. Bik, L. Kaper, K. M. Maaskant, M., Paalvast, F. Tramper, H. Sana, L. B. F. M. Waters, Z. Balog

TL;DR
This study characterizes the stellar population and formation history of the massive star-forming region RCW 36, revealing ongoing star formation influenced by feedback from massive stars and providing detailed ages and masses of individual objects.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive census of the young stellar population in RCW 36, combining photometry and spectroscopy to analyze the formation history and role of massive stars.
Findings
Central cluster age ~1.1 Myr
Massive stars located at the center
Ongoing star formation evidenced by protostars and jets
Abstract
Massive stars play a dominant role in the process of clustered star formation, with their feedback into the molecular cloud through ionizing radiation, stellar winds and outflows. The formation process of massive stars is poorly constrained because of their scarcity, the short formation timescale and obscuration. By obtaining a census of the newly formed stellar population, the star formation history of the young cluster and the role of the massive stars within it can be unraveled. We aim to reconstruct the formation history of the young stellar population of the massive star-forming region RCW 36. We study several dozens of individual objects, both photometrically and spectroscopically, look for signs of multiple generations of young stars and investigate the role of the massive stars in this process. We obtain a census of the physical parameters and evolutionary status of the young…
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