The Arches cluster revisited: I. Data presentation and stellar census
J. S. Clark, M. E. Lohr, F. Najarro, H. Dong, F. Martins

TL;DR
This study presents new near-infrared data of the Arches cluster, revealing its stellar composition, age, and evolutionary state, providing insights into massive star formation and evolution in extreme galactic environments.
Contribution
It offers the deepest spectroscopic view of the Arches cluster to date, identifying stellar types, evolutionary links, and constraining the cluster's age and properties with new observational data.
Findings
All cluster members are WNLh or O stars.
Cluster age estimated at 2-3 million years.
No H-free Wolf-Rayets detected, suggesting limited prior supernova activity.
Abstract
Located within the central region of the Galaxy, the Arches cluster appears to be one of the youngest, densest and most massive stellar aggregates within the Milky Way. As such it has the potential to be a uniquely instructive laboratory for the study of star formation in extreme environments and the physics of very massive stars. In order to determine the fundamental physical properties of both cluster and constituent stars, we provide and analyse new HST+VLT near-IR datasets. Stacking multiple epochs of spectroscopy results in the deepest view of the cluster ever obtained, allowing us to to identify candidate giant and main sequence stars for the first time. All cluster members are found to be WNLh or O stars, with the smooth and continuous progression in spectral morphologies from O super-/hypergiants through to the WNLh cohort implying a direct evolutionary connection. Importantly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
