Stellar clusterings around "Isolated" Massive YSOs in the LMC
Ian W. Stephens, Dimitrios Gouliermis, Leslie W. Looney, Robert A., Gruendl, You-Hua Chu, Daniel R. Weisz, Jonathan P. Seale, C.-H. Rosie Chen,, Tony Wong, Annie Hughes, Jorge L. Pineda, J\"urgen Ott, Erik Muller

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble observations to reveal that supposedly isolated massive young stars in the LMC are actually part of compact clusters, challenging the idea that high-mass stars form in isolation or very low-mass clusters.
Contribution
The paper provides direct imaging evidence that high-mass stars thought to form in isolation are actually in clusters, questioning previous assumptions about isolated high-mass star formation.
Findings
Most isolated MYSOs are surrounded by compact clusters of PMS stars.
High-mass stars may not form in clusters less than 100 M_sun.
Isolated clusters containing O-stars are rare but do exist.
Abstract
Observations suggest that there is a significant fraction of O-stars in the field of the Milky Way that appear to have formed in isolation or in low mass clusters (100 ). The existence of these high-mass stars that apparently formed in the field challenges the generally accepted paradigm, which requires star formation to occur in clustered environments. In order to understand the physical conditions for the formation of these stars, it is necessary to observe isolated high-mass stars while they are still forming. With the , we observe the seven most isolated massive (8 ) young stellar objects (MYSOs) in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). The observations show that while these MYSOs are remote from other MYSOs, OB associations, and even from known giant molecular clouds, they are actually not isolated at all. Imaging reveals 100 to…
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