Substellar population of the young massive cluster RCW 36 in Vela
A. R. G. do Brito do Vale, K. Mu\v{z}i\'c, H. Bouy, V. Almendros-Abad, A. Bayo, D. Capela, A. Scholz, A. Bik, G. Su\'arez, L. Cieza, K. Pe\~na Ram\'irez, E. Bertin, R. Sch\"odel

TL;DR
This study characterizes the initial mass function and substellar population of the young cluster RCW 36, revealing a broken power-law IMF, signs of primordial mass segregation, and a star-brown dwarf ratio consistent with other Galactic clusters.
Contribution
First detailed IMF and substellar census of RCW 36 using advanced observations and deep learning, revealing its mass distribution and segregation characteristics.
Findings
IMF described by broken power law with specific slopes
Star-brown dwarf ratio between 2 and 5
Evidence of primordial mass segregation
Abstract
The initial mass function (IMF) is a cornerstone of star formation studies, yet its universality remains debated. We investigate the IMF in the young massive cluster RCW 36, located in the Vela Molecular Ridge and comparable to the Orion Nebula Cluster in stellar density. Our goal is to build the most complete census of RCW 36 and derive its first IMF and star-to-brown-dwarf (BD) ratio. We combine new GLAO observations from HAWK-I/VLT with archival data (2MASS, SOFI/NTT) and Gaia DR3 kinematics. Photometric accuracy and source extraction were improved using \textsc{DeNeb}, a deep-learning algorithm that removes complex nebular emission. Membership probabilities were assigned via color-magnitude diagram comparisons with a control field, and stellar masses were estimated using model isochrones. We find a revised distance of pc and determine the IMF down to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
