Abstract

Abstract We report on the properties of the low-mass stars that recently formed in the central of 30 Dor, including the R136 cluster. Using the photometric catalog of De Marchi et al., based on observations with the Hubble Space Telescope, and the most recent extinction law for this field, we identify bona fide pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars showing excess emission at the level with an equivalent width of 20 Å or more. We find a wide spread in age spanning the range . We also find that the older PMS objects are placed in front of the R136 cluster and are separated from it by a conspicuous amount of absorbing material, indicating that star formation has proceeded from the periphery into the interior of the region. We derive physical parameters for all PMS stars, including masses m, ages t, and mass accretion rates . To identify reliable correlations between these parameters, which are intertwined, we use a multivariate linear regression fit of the type . The values of a and b for 30 Dor are compatible with those found in NGC 346 and NGC 602. We extend the fit to a uniform sample of PMS stars with / < 1.5 and in six star-forming regions in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds and Milky Way with metallicities in the range of 0.1–1.0 . We find and . The residuals are systematically different between the six regions and reveal a strong correlation with metallicity Z, of the type . A possible interpretation of this trend is that when the metallicity is higher so is the radiation pressure, and this limits the accretion process, in both its rate and duration.

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