Abstract
The goal of this dissertation is to characterize the star formation
history of the young cluster NGC2264 using the unique observational
capabilities of the Spitzer Space Telescope. The motivation to conduct
this study stems from the fact that most stars are formed within
clusters, so the formation and evolution of the latter will effect the
stellar mass distribution in the field. Detailed observational studies
of young stellar clusters are therefore crucial to provide necessary
constraints for theoretical models of cloud and cluster formation and
evolution. This study also addresses the evolution of circumstellar
disks in NGC2264; empirical knowledge of protoplanetary disk evolution
is required for the understanding of how planetary systems such as our
own form. The first result obtained from this study was both completely
new and unexpected. A dense region within NGC2264 was found to be
teeming with bright 24 μm Class I protostars; these sources are
embedded within dense submillimeter cores and are spatially distributed
along dense filamentary fingers of gas and dust that radially converge
on a B-type binary Class I source. This cluster of protostars was
baptized the "Spokes cluster" and its analysis provided further insight
into the role of thermal support during core formation, collapse and
fragmentation. The nearest neighbor projected separation distribution of
these Class I sources shows a characteristic spacing that is similar to
the Jeans length for the region, indicating that the dusty filaments may
have undergone thermal fragmentation. The submillimeter cores of the
Spokes cluster were observed at 230GHz using the SubMillimeter Array
(SMA) and the resulting high resolution (~1.3") continuum observations
revealed a dense grouping of 7 Class 0 sources embedded within a
particular core, D-MM1 (~20"x20"). The compact sources have masses
ranging between 0.4M and 1.2M, and radii of ~600AU. The mean separation
of the Class 0 sources within D-MM1 is considerably smaller than the
characteristic spacing between the Class I sources in the larger Spokes
cluster and is consistent with hierarchical thermal fragmentation of the
dense molecular gas in this region. The results obtained by the study of
the Spokes cluster show that the spatial substructuring of a cluster or
subcluster is correlated with age, i.e., groupings of very young
protostars have clearly more concentrated and substructured spatial
distributions. The Spokes cluster could thus be one of several building
blocks of NGC2264, and will likely expand and disperse its members
through the surrounding region, adding to the rest of NGC2264's stellar
population.To further explore this scenario, I identified Pre-Main
Sequence (PMS) disk bearing sources in the whole region of NGC2264, as
surveyed by InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) analyzing both their spatial
distributions and ages. Of the 1404 sources detected in all four IRAC
bands, 116 sources were found to have anemic IRAC disks and 217 sources
were found to have thick IRAC disks; the disk fraction was calculated to
be 37.5%±6.3% and found to be a function of spectral type,
increasing for later type sources. I identified 4 candidate sources with
transition disks (disks with inner holes), as well as 6 sources with
anemic inner disks and thick outer disks that could be the immediate
precursors of transition disks. This is a relevant result for it
suggests planet formation may be occurring in the inner disk at very
early ages. I found that the spatial distribution of the disk-bearing
sources was a function of both disk type and amount of reddening. This
spatial analysis enabled the identification of three groups of sources,
namely, (i) embedded (AV> 3 magnitudes) sources with thick disks,
(ii) unembedded sources with thick disks, and (iii) sources with anemic
disks. The first group was found to have a median age of 1 Myr and its
spatial distribution is highly concentrated and substructured. The
second group, (ii), has a median age of 2 Myr and its spatial
distribution is less concentrated and substructured than group (i), but
more than the group of sources with anemic disks - the spatial
distribution of this third group (age ~ 2 Myr) is not substructured and
is more distributed, showing no particular peak or concentration. The
star formation history of NGC2264 appears to be as follows: the northern
region appears to have undergone the first epoch or episode of star
formation, while the second epoch is currently occurring in the center
(Spokes cluster) and south (near Allen's source).
Status: RO
Original language | English |
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Journal | University of Lisbon, Portugal |
Publication status | Published - 1 Oct 2008 |