JWST color-magnitude criteria identify 467 dusty young objects in M33, NGC300, NGC7793 and NGC5068, with stable selection but up to 50% incompleteness at 5 Mpc and a practical limit of ~3 Mpc for individual MYSO studies.
Probing the dusty stellar populations of the Local Volume Galaxies with JWST/MIRI
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
The Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) for the {\em James Webb Space Telescope} (JWST) will revolutionize our understanding of infrared stellar populations in the Local Volume. Using the rich {\em Spitzer}-IRS spectroscopic data-set and spectral classifications from the Surveying the Agents of Galaxy Evolution (SAGE)-Spectroscopic survey of over a thousand objects in the Magellanic Clouds, the Grid of Red supergiant and Asymptotic giant branch star ModelS ({\sc grams}), and the grid of YSO models by Robitaille et al. (2006), we calculate the expected flux-densities and colors in the MIRI broadband filters for prominent infrared stellar populations. We use these fluxes to explore the {\em JWST}/MIRI colours and magnitudes for composite stellar population studies of Local Volume galaxies. MIRI colour classification schemes are presented; these diagrams provide a powerful means of identifying young stellar objects, evolved stars and extragalactic background galaxies in Local Volume galaxies with a high degree of confidence. Finally, we examine which filter combinations are best for selecting populations of sources based on their JWST colours.
fields
astro-ph.GA 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Dust-Embedded Star Formation: Bridging Magellanic Cloud Studies of Massive Young Stellar Objects to Nearby Spiral Galaxies
JWST color-magnitude criteria identify 467 dusty young objects in M33, NGC300, NGC7793 and NGC5068, with stable selection but up to 50% incompleteness at 5 Mpc and a practical limit of ~3 Mpc for individual MYSO studies.