Star cluster formation history along the minor axis of the Large Magellanic Cloud
Andr\'es E. Piatti, Andrew A. Cole, Bryn Emptage

TL;DR
This study analyzed star clusters along the minor axis of the Large Magellanic Cloud, confirming cluster candidates, deriving ages, and linking formation episodes to interactions with the Milky Way.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of cluster formation history in the LMC's outskirts and links formation episodes to galactic interactions, with new age estimates and candidate confirmations.
Findings
146 genuine star cluster candidates confirmed
Approximately 30% of catalogued clusters are likely not real
Outer LMC regions show a burst of cluster formation linked to Milky Way interaction
Abstract
We analysed Washington photometry of star clusters located along the minor axis of the LMC, from the LMC optical centre up to 39 degrees outwards to the North-West. The data base was exploited in order to search for new star cluster candidates, to produce cluster CMDs cleaned from field star contamination and to derive age estimates for a statistically complete cluster sample. We confirmed that 146 star cluster candidates are genuine physical systems, and concluded that an overall 30 per cent of catalogued clusters in the surveyed regions are unlikely to be true physical systems. We did not find any new cluster candidates in the outskirts of the LMC (deprojected distance 8 degrees). The derived ages of the studied clusters are in the range 7.2 < log( yr) 9.4, with the sole exception of the globular cluster NGC\,1786 (log( yr) =…
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