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Published May 20, 2012 | Published
Journal Article Open

A Significant Population of Candidate New Members of the ρ Ophiuchi Cluster

Abstract

We present a general method for identifying the pre-main-sequence population of any star-forming region, unbiased with respect to the presence or absence of disks, in contrast to samples selected primarily via their mid-infrared emission from Spitzer surveys. We have applied this technique to a new, deep, wide-field, near-infrared imaging survey of the ρ Ophiuchi cloud core to search for candidate low-mass members. In conjunction with published Spitzer IRAC photometry and least-squares fits of model spectra (COND, DUSTY, NextGen, and blackbody) to the observed spectral energy distributions, we have identified 948 candidate cloud members within our 90% completeness limits of J = 20.0, H = 20.0, and Ks = 18.50. This population represents a factor of ~3 increase in the number of known young stellar objects in the ρ Ophiuchi cloud. A large fraction of the candidate cluster members (81% ± 3%) exhibit infrared excess emission consistent with the presence of disks, thus strengthening the possibility of their being bona fide cloud members. Spectroscopic follow-up will confirm the nature of individual objects, better constrain their parameters, and allow an initial mass function to be derived.

Additional Information

© 2012 American Astronomical Society. Received 2011 December 14; accepted 2012 February 17; published 2012 April 30. We thank the AAO staff for their outstanding support in making our observations possible. We also thank Utah Valley University undergraduate physics student Sherene Higley for her assistance in the reduction of the AAO data. M.B., K.H., and C.M. acknowledge the support of NSF Research at Undergraduate Institutions grants AST-1007928, AST-1009776, and AST-1009590, respectively, for support of this research. M.B. gratefully acknowledges NSF grant AST-0206146, which made further contributions to this work possible. Additional support for this work was provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration through Chandra Award Number AR1-2005A and AR1-2005B issued by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory Center, which is operated by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory for and on behalf of NASA under Contract NAS8-39073.

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