One of the key questions in the field of star formation is the role of
stellar feedback on subsequent star formation process. The W3 giant molecular
cloud complex at the western border of the W4 super bubble is thought to be
influenced by the stellar winds of the massive stars in W4. AFGL333 is a ~10^4
Msun cloud within W3. This paper presents a study of the star formation
activity within AFGL333 using deep JHKs photometry obtained from the NOAO
Extremely Wide-Field Infrared Imager combined with Spitzer-IRAC-MIPS
photometry. Based on the infrared excess, we identify 812 candidate young
stellar objects in the complex, of which 99 are classified as Class I and 713
are classified as Class II sources. The stellar density analysis of young
stellar objects reveals three major stellar aggregates within AFGL333, named
here AFGL333-main, AFGL333-NW1 and AFGL333-NW2. The disk fraction within
AFGL333 is estimated to be ~50-60%. We use the extinction map made from the
H-Ks colors of the background stars to understand the cloud structure and to
estimate the cloud mass. The CO-derived extinction map corroborates the cloud
structure and mass estimates from NIR color method. From the stellar mass and
cloud mass associated with AFGL333, we infer that the region is currently
forming stars with an efficiency of ~4.5% and at a rate of ~2 - 3 Msun
Myr-1pc-2. In general, the star formation activity within AFGL333 is comparable
to that of nearby low mass star-forming regions. We do not find any strong
evidence to suggest that the stellar feedback from the massive stars of nearby
W4 super bubble has affected the global star formation properties of the
AFGL333 region.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap