The evolution of stellar structures in dwarf galaxies
N. Bastian, D.R. Weisz, E.D. Skillman, K.B.W. McQuinn, A.E. Dolphin,, R.A. Gutermuth, J.M. Cannon, B. Ercolano, M. Gieles, R.C. Kennicutt, and F., Walter

TL;DR
This study investigates how the spatial distribution of stellar populations in dwarf galaxies changes with age, revealing that initial substructures disperse over 100-350 million years, with no clear link to galaxy brightness.
Contribution
It provides new quantitative measurements of the dispersal timescales of stellar substructures in dwarf galaxies using deep HST imaging and innovative analysis methods.
Findings
Stars form with high substructure, which disperses over tens to hundreds of Myr.
Dispersal timescales vary between ~100 Myr and ~350 Myr across different galaxies.
No strong correlation between dispersal time and galaxy luminosity.
Abstract
We present a study of the variation of spatial structure of stellar populations within dwarf galaxies as a function of the population age. We use deep Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys imaging of nearby dwarf galaxies in order to resolve individual stars and create composite colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) for each galaxy. Using the obtained CMDs, we select Blue Helium Burning stars (BHeBs), which can be unambiguously age-dated by comparing the absolute magnitude of individual stars with stellar isochrones. Additionally, we select a very young (<10 Myr) population of OB stars for a subset of the galaxies based on the tip of the young main-sequence. By selecting stars in different age ranges we can then study how the spatial distribution of these stars evolves with time. We find, in agreement with previous studies, that stars are born within galaxies with a high degree…
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