Dynamical few-body encounters in the dense cores of young massive star clusters are responsible for the loss of a significant fraction of their massive stellar content. Some of the escaping (runaway) stars move through the ambient medium supersonically and can be revealed via detection of their bow shocks (visible in the infrared, optical or radio). In this paper, which is the second of a series of papers devoted to the search for OB stars running away from young ( ≲ several Myr) Galactic clusters and OB associations, we present the results of the search for bow shocks around the star-forming region NGC 6357. Using the archival data of the Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) satellite and the Spitzer Space Telescope, and the preliminary data ...
We use Gaia DR2 to hunt for runaway stars from the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We search a region ex...
Context. Circumstellar disks are expected to evolve quickly in massive young clusters harboring man...
Aims.We investigate the star BD+43° 3654 and the possibility that it may have originated in the mass...
Dynamical few-body encounters in the dense cores of young massive star clusters are responsible for ...
Using archival Spitzer Space Telescope data, we identified for the first time a dozen runa...
International audienceMassive stars that have been ejected from their parent cluster and supersonica...
In two papers we try to confirm that all Galactic high-mass stars are formed in a cluster environmen...
Context. Bow shocks are produced by many astrophysical objects where shock waves are present. Stella...
Context. Bow shocks are produced by many astrophysical objects where shock waves are present. Stella...
The origin of massive field stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) has long been an enigma. The r...
We use milli-arcsecond accuracy astrometry (proper motions and parallaxes) from Hipparcos and from r...
Identifying binaries among runaway O- and B-type stars offers valuable insight into the evolution of...
Context. We investigate the occurrence of stellar bow shocks around high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs)...
Context. Recent near-infrared data have contributed to unveiling massive and obscured stellar popula...
Context. There exists an enigmatic population of massive stars around the Galactic center ...
We use Gaia DR2 to hunt for runaway stars from the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We search a region ex...
Context. Circumstellar disks are expected to evolve quickly in massive young clusters harboring man...
Aims.We investigate the star BD+43° 3654 and the possibility that it may have originated in the mass...
Dynamical few-body encounters in the dense cores of young massive star clusters are responsible for ...
Using archival Spitzer Space Telescope data, we identified for the first time a dozen runa...
International audienceMassive stars that have been ejected from their parent cluster and supersonica...
In two papers we try to confirm that all Galactic high-mass stars are formed in a cluster environmen...
Context. Bow shocks are produced by many astrophysical objects where shock waves are present. Stella...
Context. Bow shocks are produced by many astrophysical objects where shock waves are present. Stella...
The origin of massive field stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) has long been an enigma. The r...
We use milli-arcsecond accuracy astrometry (proper motions and parallaxes) from Hipparcos and from r...
Identifying binaries among runaway O- and B-type stars offers valuable insight into the evolution of...
Context. We investigate the occurrence of stellar bow shocks around high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs)...
Context. Recent near-infrared data have contributed to unveiling massive and obscured stellar popula...
Context. There exists an enigmatic population of massive stars around the Galactic center ...
We use Gaia DR2 to hunt for runaway stars from the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC). We search a region ex...
Context. Circumstellar disks are expected to evolve quickly in massive young clusters harboring man...
Aims.We investigate the star BD+43° 3654 and the possibility that it may have originated in the mass...