The Nature of Starbursts : II. The Duration of Starbursts in Dwarf Galaxies
Kristen B. W. McQuinn, Evan D. Skillman, John M. Cannon, Julianne, Dalcanton, Andrew Dolphin, Sebastian Hidalgo-Rodr\'iguez, Jon Holtzman, David, Stark, Daniel Weisz, and Benjamin Williams

TL;DR
This study measures starburst durations in dwarf galaxies, revealing they last hundreds of millions to over a billion years, significantly longer than previously thought, impacting galaxy evolution and feedback processes.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive measurement of starburst durations in dwarf galaxies using resolved stellar populations, showing longer timescales than prior estimates.
Findings
Starbursts last 450 Myr to 1.3 Gyr in dwarf galaxies.
Starbursts deposit up to 10^(57.2) ergs into the interstellar medium.
Starbursts can produce 3% to 26% of the galaxy's stellar mass.
Abstract
The starburst phenomenon can shape the evolution of the host galaxy and the surrounding intergalactic medium. The extent of the evolutionary impact is partly determined by the duration of the starburst, which has a direct correlation with both the amount of stellar feedback and the development of galactic winds, particularly for smaller mass dwarf systems. We measure the duration of starbursts in twenty nearby, ongoing, and "fossil" starbursts in dwarf galaxies based on the recent star formation histories derived from resolved stellar population data obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. Contrary to the shorter times of 3-10 Myr often cited, the starburst durations we measure range from 450 - 650 Myr in fifteen of the dwarf galaxies and up to 1.3 Gyr in four galaxies; these longer durations are comparable to or longer than the dynamical timescales for each system. The same feedback…
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