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W49A is one of the most luminous giant H II (GH II) regions in our Galaxy. This star forming complex contains numerous compact and ultra-compact (UC) H II regions, extending over an area of 15 pc. It emits about 10^{51} Lyman continuum photons per second, equivalent to the presence of about 100 O stars, but it is completely obscured in optical wavelengths by intervening interstellar dust. The center holds a ``cluster of about 30 O stars, each within an individual UCHII region emitting free-free emission at cm wavelengths. Our deep K-band (2.2 um) image toward the W49A cluster reveals just two of the individual exciting stars, each associated with a point--like radio source, but the rest are invisible. These O stars are so recently born as to not yet have emerged from their natal dust cocoons, in contrast to other Galactic clusters embedded in GH II regions in which many of the individual massive stars are already revealed. Plausibility arguments are made which suggest that a stellar disc might be common during the entire UCH II phase of massive star birth, as it persists after accretion ceases in some stars. Nebular emission (e.g., from Br gamma) is visible around the periphery of the central region of W49A, along with candidate exciting stars. Star formation there may have preceeded that in the center, or its lower density environment may have speeded up the dispersal of the natal dust cocoons. The W49A cluster can serve as a template for the more luminous buried star clusters now being found in normal galaxies and starbursts.
We investigate the star formation activity in a young star forming cluster embedded at the edge of the RCW 41 HII region. As a complementary goal, we aim at demonstrating the gain provided by Wide-Field Adaptive Optics instruments to study young clus
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