Spectroscopic Confirmation of a Population of Isolated, Intermediate-Mass YSOs
Michael A. Kuhn (1), Ramzi Saber (1), Matthew S. Povich (2), Rafael S., de Souza (3), Alberto Krone-Martins (4,5), Emille E. O. Ishida (6), Catherine, Zucker (7,8), Robert A. Benjamin (10), Lynne A. Hillenbrand (1), Alfred, Castro-Ginard (11), Xingyu Zhou (12) ((1) Caltech

TL;DR
This study spectroscopically confirms a population of isolated intermediate-mass young stellar objects (YSOs), revealing their properties and distribution, and showing they are part of large Galactic structures rather than truly isolated.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of isolated YSOs from the SPICY catalog, characterizing their properties and spatial distribution within Galactic structures.
Findings
All 26 optically-bright candidates confirmed as YSOs.
Isolated YSOs are concentrated in large Galactic structures.
Masses range from 1 to 7 solar masses, with typical accretion rates.
Abstract
Wide-field searches for young stellar objects (YSOs) can place useful constraints on the prevalence of clustered versus distributed star formation. The Spitzer/IRAC Candidate YSO (SPICY) catalog is one of the largest compilations of such objects (~120,000 candidates in the Galactic midplane). Many SPICY candidates are spatially clustered, but, perhaps surprisingly, approximately half the candidates appear spatially distributed. To better characterize this unexpected population and confirm its nature, we obtained Palomar/DBSP spectroscopy for 26 of the optically-bright (G<15 mag) "isolated" YSO candidates. We confirm the YSO classifications of all 26 sources based on their positions on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, H and Ca II line-emission from over half the sample, and robust detection of infrared excesses. This implies a contamination rate of <10% for SPICY stars that meet our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpectroscopy and Laser Applications
