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Hunting young stars in the Galactic centre. Hundreds of thousands of solar masses of young stars in the Sagittarius C region (2401.07900v1)

Published 15 Jan 2024 in astro-ph.GA

Abstract: The Galactic centre stands out as the most prolific star-forming environment of the Galaxy when averaged over volume. In the last 30 million years, it has witnessed the formation of $\sim106 M_\odot$ of stars. However, crowding and high extinction hamper their detection and, up to now, only a small fraction of the expected mass of young stars has been identified. We aim to detect hidden young stars at the Galactic centre by analysing the stellar population in Sagittarius (Sgr) C. This is a region at the western edge of the nuclear stellar disc whose HII emission makes it a perfect candidate to host young stars. We built dereddened luminosity functions for Sgr C and a control field in the central region of the nuclear stellar disc, and fitted them with a linear combination of theoretical models to analyse their stellar population. We find that Sgr C hosts several $105 M_\odot$ of young stars. We compared our results with the recently discovered young stellar population in Sgr B1, which is situated at the opposite edge of the nuclear stellar disc. We estimated that the Sgr C young stars are $\sim20$ Myr old, and likely show the next evolutionary step of the slightly younger stars in Sgr B1. Our findings contribute to addressing the discrepancy between the expected and the detected number of young stars in the Galactic centre, and shed light on their evolution in this extreme environment. As a secondary result, we find an intermediate-age stellar population in Sgr C ($\sim50$ % of its stellar mass with an age of between 2 and 7 Gyr), which is not present in the innermost regions of the nuclear stellar disc (dominated by stars >7 Gyr). This supports the existence of an age gradient and favours an inside-out formation of the nuclear stellar disc.

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