NGC 796 is a massive young cluster located 59 kpc from us in the diffuse
intergalactic medium of the 1/5-1/10 Z⊙ Magellanic Bridge, allowing to
probe variations in star formation and stellar evolution processes as a
function of metallicity in a resolved fashion, providing a link between
resolved studies of nearby solar-metallicity and unresolved distant metal-poor
clusters located in high-redshift galaxies. In this paper, we present adaptive
optics griHα imaging of NGC 796 (at 0.5", which is ~0.14 pc at the
cluster distance) along with optical spectroscopy of two bright members to
quantify the cluster properties. Our aim is to explore if star formation and
stellar evolution varies as a function of metallicity by comparing the
properties of NGC 796 to higher metallicity clusters. We find from isochronal
fitting of the cluster main sequence in the colour-magnitude diagram an age of
20−5+12 Myr. Based on the cluster luminosity function, we derive a
top-heavy stellar initial mass function (IMF) with a slope α =
1.99±0.2, hinting at an metallicity and/or environmental dependence of the
IMF which may lead to a top-heavy IMF in the early Universe. Study of the
Hα emission line stars reveals that Classical Be stars constitute a
higher fraction of the total B-type stars when compared with similar clusters
at greater metallicity, providing some support to the chemically homogeneous
theory of stellar evolution. Overall, NGC 796 has a total estimated mass of
990±200M⊙, and a core radius of 1.4±0.3 pc which classifies
it as a massive young open cluster, unique in the diffuse interstellar medium
of the Magellanic Bridge.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Contains 14
pages, 11 figures, and 3 table