Abstract

We present a catalog of near-infrared photometry of young stars associated with the Ophiuchus molecular cloud based on observations made with the Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS3 camera at 1.1 and 1.6 μm. Our survey covers 0.02 deg2 centered on the dense molecular cores in Lynds 1688. We detect 165 sources at 1.6 μm and 65 sources at 1.1 μm within our estimated completeness limits of 21.0 and 21.5 mag, respectively. An analysis of the cloud extinction, based on existing molecular line maps, suggests that most of the sources lying within the 40 AV extinction contour of the cloud are probable cloud members. Approximately half (58/108) of these sources are previously unpublished.The faint embedded sources revealed by these observations are spatially concentrated in three regions of high stellar space density (N > 104 stars pc-3). While the spatial distribution of these sources reflects that of the brighter, well-known population of young stars in Ophiuchus, it is distinctly different from the distribution of cool concentrations seen in the submillimeter. Seven new brown dwarf candidates are identified based on their infrared colors and their projected locations on high column density regions of the molecular cloud. Eight new candidate binary and five new candidate triple systems, having separations between 02 and 10'' (29-1450 AU) are reported. The spatial resolution and sensitivity of these observations reveal five apparent disk/envelope systems seen via scattered light and four nebulous objects with complex morphologies.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call