Massive Stars in the W33 Giant Molecular Complex
Maria Messineo (MPIfR), J. Simon Clark (Open University), Donald F., Figer (RIT), Rolf-Peter Kudritzki (University of Hawaii), Francisco Najarro, (CSIC-INTA), R. Michael Rich (University of California), Karl M. Menten, (MPIfR), Valentin D. Ivanov (ESO), Elena Valenti (ESO)

TL;DR
This study investigates the massive star population in the W33 molecular complex, revealing recent star formation activity and providing insights into its stellar evolution and comparison with other star-forming regions.
Contribution
First infrared spectroscopic survey of W33 identifying fourteen early-type stars and analyzing its star formation history and stellar population.
Findings
Detected 14 early-type stars including one WN6 and four O4-7 stars.
Star formation in W33 occurred approximately 2-4 million years ago.
W33 is likely to evolve into a loose stellar aggregate rather than a dense cluster.
Abstract
Rich in HII regions, giant molecular clouds are natural laboratories to study massive stars and sequential star formation. The Galactic star forming complex W33 is located at l=~12.8deg and at a distance of 2.4 kpc, has a size of ~10 pc and a total mass of (~0.8 - ~8.0) X 10^5 Msun. The integrated radio and IR luminosity of W33 - when combined with the direct detection of methanol masers, the protostellar object W33A, and protocluster embedded within the radio source W33 main - mark the region out as a site of vigorous ongoing star formation. In order to assess the long term star formation history, we performed an infrared spectroscopic search for massive stars, detecting for the first time fourteen early-type stars, including one WN6 star and four O4-7 stars. The distribution of spectral types suggests that this population formed during the last ~2-4 Myr, while the absence of red…
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