The star-forming complex LMC-N79 as a future rival to 30 Doradus
Bram B. Ochsendorf, Hans Zinnecker, Omnarayani Nayak, John Bally,, Margaret Meixner, Olivia C. Jones, Remy Indebetouw, Mubdi Rahman

TL;DR
A newly discovered massive star-forming complex in the LMC, N79, exhibits higher efficiency than 30 Doradus and may host a precursor to a super star cluster, offering insights into extreme star formation in the universe.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery of N79, a massive star-forming complex in the LMC with higher efficiency and a potential precursor to a super star cluster, expanding understanding of extreme star formation.
Findings
N79 has a star formation efficiency twice that of 30 Doradus.
N79 contains the most luminous IR compact source in the LMC.
N79 may host a precursor to the super star cluster R136.
Abstract
Within the early Universe, `extreme' star formation may have been the norm rather than the exception. Super Star Clusters (SSCs; 10 M) are thought to be the modern-day analogs of globular clusters, relics of a cosmic time ( 2) when the Universe was filled with vigorously star-forming systems. The giant HII region 30 Doradus in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) is often regarded as a benchmark for studies of extreme star formation. Here, we report the discovery of a massive embedded star forming complex spanning 500 pc in the unexplored southwest region of the LMC, which manifests itself as a younger, embedded twin of 30 Doradus. Previously known as N79, this region has a star formation efficiency exceeding that of 30 Doradus by a factor of 2 as measured over the past 0.5 Myr. Moreover, at the heart of N79 lies the most…
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.
