Deep near-infrared adaptive optics observations of a young embedded cluster at the edge of the RCW 41 HII region
B. Neichel (1), M.R. Samal (1), H. Plana (2), A. Zavagno (1), A., Bernard (1,3), T. Fusco (1,3) ((1) Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de, Marseille - LAM, (2) Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz, (3) ONERA)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced adaptive optics imaging combined with infrared data to analyze a young embedded star cluster at the edge of RCW 41, revealing its age distribution, initial mass function, and evidence of sequential star formation.
Contribution
First application of Gemini-GeMS/GSAOI adaptive optics to study a young embedded cluster, demonstrating detailed stellar population analysis and IMF characterization.
Findings
Detected 80 YSO candidates with ages 1-5 Myr.
Constructed the IMF extending into the brown dwarf regime.
Found an age gradient suggesting sequential star formation.
Abstract
We investigate the star formation activity in a young star forming cluster embedded at the edge of the RCW 41 HII region. As a complementary goal, we aim at demonstrating the gain provided by Wide-Field Adaptive Optics instruments to study young clusters. We used deep, JHKs images from the newly commissioned Gemini-GeMS/GSAOI instrument, complemented with Spitzer IRAC observations, in order to study the photometric properties of the young stellar cluster. GeMS is an AO instrument, delivering almost diffraction limited images over a field of 2' across. The exquisite angular resolution allows us to reach a limiting magnitude of J = 22 for 98% completeness. The combination of the IRAC photometry with our JHKs catalog is used to build color-color diagrams, and select Young Stellar Objects (YSOs) candidates. We detect the presence of 80 Young Stellar Object (YSO) candidates. Those YSOs are…
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