Deep V and I CCD photometry of young star cluster NGC 1893 with the 3.6m DOT
Neelam Panwar, Amit Kumar, S. B. Pandey

TL;DR
This study used deep optical photometry to identify and analyze approximately 425 young stars in the NGC 1893 cluster, revealing its stellar population, mass function, and spatial distribution of stars of different masses.
Contribution
First deep VI band CCD photometry of NGC 1893 enabling identification of new low-mass young stars and detailed analysis of the cluster's stellar population and mass function.
Findings
Approximately 425 young stars identified, including 110 new members.
Mass function slope consistent with other star-forming regions (-1.43 ± 0.15).
Mass segregation observed with more massive stars concentrated toward the center.
Abstract
Young star clusters consisting of massive stars are the ideal sites to study the star formation processes and influence of massive stars on the subsequent star formation. NGC 1893 is a young star cluster associated with the HII region Sh2-236. It contains about five `O'-type stars and several early `B'-type stars. It is located at a distance of 3.25 kpc and has a reddening, E(B-V)0.4 mag. To characterize the young low-mass stellar population in the central portion of the cluster, we carried out deep VI band observations of the region using the 4K4K CCD IMAGER mounted on the 3.6-m DOT. Our analysis shows that the present data are deep enough to detect stars below 24 mag. We found optical counterparts of 220 candidate members, including young stars and unclassified cluster members from Caramazza et al. (2008). We estimated the membership probabilities of…
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