Bibcode
Monteagudo Narvion, L.; Monelli, M.; Gallart, C.; Nidever, D.; Olse, K.; Gruendl, R.; Blum, R.; Walker, A.; Saha, A.; Olszewski, E.; Muñoz, R.; Kunder, A.; Kaleida, C.; Conn, B.; Besla, G.; Majewski, S.; Stringfellow, G.; Karitsky, D.; Chu, Y. H.; Van Der Marel, R.; Marcn, N.; Noel, N.; Jin, S.; Kim, H.; Cioni, M. R.; Bell, E.; Monachesi, A.; Vivas, K.; de Boer, T.
Referencia bibliográfica
Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics VIII, Proceedings of the XI Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Astronomical Society held on September 8-12, 2014, in Teruel, Spain, ISBN 978-84-606-8760-3. A. J. Cenarro, F. Figueras, C. Hernández-Monteagudo, J. Trujillo Bueno, and L. Valdivielso (eds.), p. 375-375
Fecha de publicación:
5
2015
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Various recent discoveries have drastically altered our view of the
Magellanic Clouds (MCs), the nearest interacting galaxy system formed by
a low mass spiral and a dwarf irregular galaxy. The best evidence is now
that they are on frst infall into the Milky Way, that their stellar
populations extend much further than previously thought, and that they
display important galactocentric gradients. Several facts indicate that
low mass spirals may not fit in the general framework of massive spiral
galaxy formation. Thus, understanding the process of their formation and
evolution is fundamental to understand the general process of galaxy
formation. Because the MCs are so close, they are key to study the
formation and evolution of galaxies because they other us the
opportunity to derive their evolutionary histories, including the
characteristics of the first events of star formation. This is thanks to
the fact that, for them, we can obtain photometry and spectroscopy of
individual stars, and use the theory of stellar evolution to calculate
ages that will allow us to obtain the star formation and chemical
enrichment histories in great detail. We are involved in a large survey
of the MCs, called SMASH (Survey Magellanic Stellar History). It is a
NOAO communityDECam survey of the Clouds mapping 480 deg^2 (distributed
over ˜ 2400 deg^2 at ˜20 % filling factor) to 24th mag griz
(and u ˜ 23). SMASH will: (1) map the stellar periphery of the
Clouds with old main sequence turnoff stars to a surface brightness
limit of 35 mag arcsec^{-2}, (2) identify the stellar component of the
Magellanic Stream and Leading Arm for the first time, if they exist, and
(3) derive spatially-resolved star formation histories covering all ages
out to large radius from the Cloud centers. Our group at the IAC is the
main responsible for objective (3).