The historical record of massive star formation in Cygnus
F. Comer\'on, A.A. Djupvik, N. Schneider, A. Pasquali

TL;DR
This study reconstructs the star formation history of the Cygnus region over the past 40 million years by analyzing red supergiants, revealing multiple episodes of star formation and their kinematic differences.
Contribution
It provides a detailed, homogeneous analysis of red supergiants in Cygnus, uncovering the region's star formation episodes over tens of millions of years.
Findings
Star formation in Cygnus began around 15 Myr ago.
Evidence of two earlier star formation episodes between 20-30 Myr and 40 Myr ago.
Older stars likely formed outside the current Cygnus complex, possibly in the Sagittarius-Carina arm.
Abstract
The Cygnus region, which dominates the local spiral arm of the Galaxy, is one of the nearest complexes of massive star formation. Its massive stellar content, regions of ongoing star formation, and molecular gas have been studied in detail. However, little is known of the history of the region beyond the past 10 Myr. The brightness and spectroscopic characteristics of red supergiants make it easy to identify them and build up a virtually complete sample of such stars at the distance of the Cygnus region, thus providing a record of massive star formation extending several tens of Myr into the past, a period inaccessible through the O and early B stars observable at present. We have made a selection of a sample of bright, red stars in an area of 84 square degrees covering the whole present extension of the Cygnus region. We have obtained spectroscopy in the red visible range allowing an…
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