Bibcode
DOI
Cole, Andrew A.; Skillman, Evan D.; Tolstoy, Eline; Gallagher, John S., III; Aparicio, Antonio; Dolphin, Andrew E.; Gallart, Carme; Hidalgo, Sebastian L.; Saha, Abhijit; Stetson, Peter B.; Weisz, Daniel R.
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 659, Issue 1, pp. L17-L20.
Advertised on:
4
2007
Journal
Citations
176
Refereed citations
139
Description
As part of a major program to use isolated Local Group dwarf galaxies as
near-field probes of cosmology, we have obtained deep images of the
dwarf irregular galaxy Leo A with the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard
the Hubble Space Telescope. From these images we have constructed a
color-magnitude diagram (CMD) reaching apparent [absolute] magnitudes of
(M475, M814)>~(29.0 [+4.4], 27.9 [+3.4]), the
deepest ever achieved for any irregular galaxy beyond the Magellanic
Clouds. We derive the star formation rate (SFR) as a function of time
over the entire history of the galaxy. We find that over 90% of all the
star formation that ever occurred in Leo A happened more recently than 8
Gyr ago. The CMD shows only a very small amount of star formation in the
first few billion years after the big bang; a possible burst at the
oldest ages cannot be claimed with high confidence. The peak SFR
occurred ~1.5-4 Gyr ago, at a level 5-10 times the current value. Our
modeling indicates that Leo A has experienced very little metallicity
evolution; the mean inferred metallicity is consistent with measurements
of the present-day gas-phase oxygen abundance. We cannot exclude a
scenario in which all of the ancient star formation occurred prior to
the end of the era of reionization, but it seems unlikely that the lack
of star formation prior to ~8 Gyr ago was due to early loss or
exhaustion of the in situ gas reservoir.