Y The star formation histories of dwarf galaxies in Local Group cosmological simulations

Digby, Ruth; Navarro, Julio F; Fattahi, Azadeh; Simpson, Christine M; Oman, Kyle A; Gomez, Facundo A; Frenk, Carlos S; Grand, Robert J J; Pakmor, Ruediger

Abstract

We use the APOSTLE and Auriga cosmological simulations to study the star formation histories (SFHs) of field and satellite dwarf galaxies. Despite sizeable galaxy-to-galaxy scatter, the SFHs of APOSTLE and Auriga dwarfs exhibit robust average trends with galaxy stellar mass: faint field dwarfs (10(5) < M-star/M-circle dot < 10(6)) have, on average, steadily declining SFHs, whereas brighter dwarfs (10(7) < M-star/M-circle dot < 10(9)) show the opposite trend. Intermediate-mass dwarfs have roughly constant SFHs. Satellites exhibit similar average trends, but with substantially suppressed star formation in the most recent similar to 5 Gyr, likely as a result of gas loss due to tidal and ram-pressure stripping after entering the haloes of their primaries. These simple mass and environmental trends are in good agreement with the derived SFHs of Local Group (LG) dwarfs whose photometry reaches the oldest main-sequence turn-off. SFHs of galaxies with less deep data show deviations from these trends, but this may be explained, at least in part, by the large galaxy-to-galaxy scatter, the limited sample size, and the large uncertainties of the inferred SFHs. Confirming the predicted mass and environmental trends will require deeper photometric data than currently available, especially for isolated dwarfs.

Más información

Título según WOS: Y The star formation histories of dwarf galaxies in Local Group cosmological simulations
Título según SCOPUS: The star formation histories of dwarf galaxies in Local Group cosmological simulations
Título de la Revista: MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volumen: 485
Número: 4
Editorial: OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 5423
Página final: 5437
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1093/mnras/stz745

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS