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We describe the results of two near infrared (K-band) imaging surveys and a three color (JHK) survey of the vicinity of NGC 7538. The limiting magnitudes are K ~ 16.5 and K ~ 17.5 mag for the K-band surveys and K ~ 15 mag for the JHK survey. We identify more than 2000 and 9000 near-infrared (NIR) sources on the images of the two K-band surveys and 786 NIR sources in the JHK survey. From color-color diagrams, we derive a reddening law for background stars and identify 238 stars with NIR excesses. Contour maps indicate a high density peak coincident with a concentration of stars with NIR excesses. We identify this peak as a young, embedded cluster and confirm this result with the K-band luminosity function, color histograms, and color-magnitude diagrams. The center of the cluster is at RA = 23:13:39.34, DEC = 61:29:18.9. The cluster radius is $sim$ 3 ~ 2.5 pc for an adopted distance, d ~ 2.8 kpc. For d = 2.8 kpc, and reddening, E_{J-K} = 0.55 mag, the slope of the logarithmic K-band luminosity function (KLF) of the cluster, s ~ 0.32 +- 0.03, agrees well with previous results for L1630 (s = 0.34) and M17 (s = 0.26).
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
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 se
The characterisation of the stellar population toward young high-mass star-forming regions allows to constrain fundamental cluster properties like distance and age. These are essential when using high-mass clusters as probes to conduct Galactic studi
We present the results of a high resolution near infrared adaptive optics survey of the young obscured star forming region NGC 2024. Out of the total 73 stars detected in the adaptive optics survey of the cluster, we find 3 binaries and one triple. T
NGC 7129 is a bright reflection nebula located in the molecular cloud complex near l=105.4, b=+9.9, about 1.15 kpc distant. Embedded within the reflection nebula is a young cluster dominated by a compact grouping of four early-type stars: BD+65 1638