The History of Star Formation in Galaxies
Thomas M. Brown, Marc Postman (STScI), Daniela Calzetti (UMass)

TL;DR
Understanding galaxy formation requires detailed star formation histories, which can be achieved through advanced multi-band photometry of resolved stellar populations across diverse galaxy types in the local universe.
Contribution
The paper emphasizes the need for improved observational capabilities to study resolved stellar populations in a wide range of galaxies for better understanding of galaxy evolution.
Findings
Hierarchical galaxy assembly supported by observations
Resolved stellar populations reveal star formation and chemical histories
Future observations can extend these studies to larger galaxy samples
Abstract
If we are to develop a comprehensive and predictive theory of galaxy formation and evolution, it is essential that we obtain an accurate assessment of how and when galaxies assemble their stellar populations, and how this assembly varies with environment. There is strong observational support for the hierarchical assembly of galaxies, but by definition the dwarf galaxies we see today are not the same as the dwarf galaxies and proto-galaxies that were disrupted during the assembly. Our only insight into those disrupted building blocks comes from sifting through the resolved field populations of the surviving giant galaxies to reconstruct the star formation history, chemical evolution, and kinematics of their various structures. To obtain the detailed distribution of stellar ages and metallicities over the entire life of a galaxy, one needs multi-band photometry reaching solar-luminosity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
