The VISTA Orion mini-survey: star formation in the Lynds 1630 North cloud
L. Spezzi (1,2), M. G. Petr-Gotzens (1), J. M. Alcal\'a (3), J. K., J{\o}rgensen (4), T. Stanke (1), M. Lombardi (5, 6), J. F. Alves (7) ((1), ESO-Garching, (2) EUMETSAT-Darmstadt, (3) INAF - Capodimonte, (4) Niels Bohr, Institute - Copenhagen, (5) University of Milan

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared and Spitzer data to analyze star formation in the L1630N region of Orion, revealing high disk fractions and ongoing star formation, with properties comparable to other galactic regions but distinct from Orion A.
Contribution
First detailed multi-wavelength analysis of L1630N, identifying young stellar objects and comparing its star formation properties to other regions, highlighting regional differences.
Findings
High fraction (~85%) of YSOs with disks/envelopes
Star formation activity is ongoing in L1630N
Star formation efficiency and rate are lower than in Orion A
Abstract
The Orion cloud complex presents a variety of star formation mechanisms and properties and it is still one of the most intriguing targets for star formation studies. We present VISTA/VIRCAM near-infrared observations of the L1630N star forming region, including the stellar clusters NGC 2068 and NGC 2071, in the Orion molecular cloud B and discuss them in combination with Spitzer data. We select 186 young stellar object (YSO) candidates in the region on the basis of multi-colour criteria, confirm the YSO nature of the majority of them using published spectroscopy from the literature, and use this sample to investigate the overall star formation properties in L1630N. The K-band luminosity function of L1630N is remarkably similar to that of the Trapezium cluster, i.e., it presents a broad peak in the range 0.3-0.7 M and a fraction of sub-stellar objects of 20%. The fraction…
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.
