Young open clusters in the galactic star forming region NGC 6357
Fabrizio Massi (1), Andrea Giannetti (2, 5), Elisa di Carlo (3),, Jan Brand (2, 5), Maria Teresa Beltr\'an (1), Gianni Marconi (4) ((1) INAF, - OA Arcetri, (2) INAF - IRA Bologna, (3) INAF - OA Teramo, (4) ESO - Chile,, (5) Italian ALMA Regional Centre)

TL;DR
This study investigates the young stellar populations and star formation processes in the active NGC 6357 region, revealing details about the clusters' ages, initial mass functions, and evidence of triggered star formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the properties, substructure, and star formation mechanisms of young open clusters in NGC 6357 using multi-wavelength data.
Findings
Pismis24 is a very young (~1-3 Myr) cluster with a Salpeter-like IMF.
A significant fraction (0.3-0.6) of members have circumstellar disks.
Evidence suggests ongoing star formation triggered by massive stars.
Abstract
NGC6357 is an active star forming region with very young massive open clusters (OC). These clusters contain some of the most massive stars in the Galaxy and strongly interact with nearby giant molecular clouds (GMC). We study the young stellar populations of the region and of the OC Pismis24, focusing on their relationship with the nearby GMCs. We seek evidence of triggered star formation propagating from the clusters. We used new deep JHKs photometry, along with unpublished deep IRAC/Spitzer MIR photometry, complemented with optical HST/WFPC2 high spatial resolution photometry and X-ray Chandra observations, to constrain age, initial mass function, and star formation modes in progress. We carefully examine and discuss all sources of bias (saturation, confusion, different sensitivities, extinction). NGC6357 hosts three large young stellar clusters, of which Pismis24 is the most…
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