The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury VI. The Ancient Star Forming disk of NGC 404
Benjamin F. Williams, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Karoline M. Gilbert,, Adrienne Stilp, Andrew Dolphin, Anil C. Seth, Daniel Weisz, Evan Skillman

TL;DR
This study uses HST observations to analyze the stellar populations and star formation history of the nearby dwarf S0 galaxy NGC 404, revealing an predominantly old disk with a complex star formation history influenced by gas accretion.
Contribution
It provides detailed modeling of NGC 404's stellar populations, showing most stars formed early, and links star formation history to gas dynamics and galaxy evolution.
Findings
70% of stellar mass formed by z~2 (10 Gyr ago)
Most star formation decreased with gas density over time
Recent star formation possibly triggered by gas accretion event
Abstract
We present HST/WFPC2 observations across the disk of the nearby isolated dwarf S0 galaxy NGC 404, which hosts an extended gas disk. Our deepest field reaches the red clump and main-sequence stars with ages <500 Myr. Although we detect trace amounts of star formation at times more recent than 10 Gyr for all fields, the proportion of red giant stars to asymptotic giants and main sequence stars suggests that the disk is dominated by an ancient (>10 Gyr) population. Detailed modeling of the color-magnitude diagram suggests that ~70% of the stellar mass in the NGC 404 disk formed by z~2 (10 Gyr ago) and at least ~90% formed prior to z~1 (8 Gyr ago). These results indicate that the stellar populations of the NGC 404 disk are on average significantly older than those of other nearby disk galaxies, suggesting that early and late type disks may have different long-term evolutionary histories,…
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