Identifying two groups of massive stars aligned in the $l\sim38^{\circ}$ Galactic direction
Sebasti\'an Ram\'irez Alegr\'ia, Artemio Herrero, Klaus R\"ubke,, Antonio Mar\'in-Franch, Miriam Garc\'ia, and Jura Borissova

TL;DR
This study identifies two distinct populations of massive stars along the Galactic direction $l=38^{\
Contribution
It introduces a modified friends-of-friends algorithm to detect massive star populations and characterizes two separate groups of OB-type stars in the Milky Way.
Findings
Two populations of massive stars are identified at different distances.
Spectroscopic classification reveals diverse stellar types including Wolf-Rayets and LBV candidates.
The populations are located in different Galactic arms, not forming a single cluster.
Abstract
Context: Recent near-infrared data have contributed to unveil massive and obscured stellar populations in both new and previously known clusters in our Galaxy. These discoveries lead us to view the Milky Way as an active star-forming machine. Aims: We look for young massive cluster candidates as over-densities of OB-type stars. The first search, focused on the Galactic direction , resulted in the detection of two objects with a remarkable population of OB-type star candidates. Methods: With a modified version of the friends-of-friends algorithm AUTOPOP and using 2MASS and UKIDSS-GPS near-infrared (, , and ) photometry for one of our cluster candidates (named Masgomas-6) we selected 30 stars for multi-object and long-slit - and -spectroscopy. With the spectral classification and the near-infrared photometric data, we derive individual distance, extinction and…
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