The ACS LCID project. VI. The SFH of the Tucana dSph and the relative ages of the isolated dSph galaxies
M. Monelli, C. Gallart, S.L. Hidalgo, A. Aparicio, E.D. Skillman, A.A., Cole, D.R. Weisz, L. Mayer, E.J. Bernard, S. Cassisi, A.E. Dolphin, I., Drozdovsky, P.B. Stetson

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST data to analyze the star formation history of the Tucana dwarf spheroidal galaxy, revealing an early, intense star formation burst and comparing its evolution to the isolated Cetus galaxy, with implications for reionization effects.
Contribution
It provides the deepest color-magnitude diagram for Tucana and compares its star formation history with Cetus, highlighting differences in their formation times and reionization impact.
Findings
Tucana experienced a strong initial star formation burst ~13 Gyr ago.
Cetus's star formation was delayed compared to Tucana.
Reionization may not have strongly affected small dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We present a detailed study of the star formation history (SFH) of the Tucana dwarf spheroidal galaxy. High quality, deep HST/ACS data, allowed us to obtain the deepest color-magnitude diagram to date, reaching the old main sequence turnoff (F814 ~ 29) with good photometric accuracy. Our analysis, based on three different SFH codes, shows that Tucana is an old and metal-poor stellar system, which experienced a strong initial burst of star formation at a very early epoch (~ 13 Gyr ago) which lasted a maximum of 1 Gyr (sigma value). We are not able to unambiguously answer the question of whether most star formation in Tucana occurred before or after the end of the reionization era, and we analyze alternative scenarios that may explain the transformation of Tucana from a gas-rich galaxy into a dSph. Current measurements of its radial velocity do not preclude that Tucana may have crossed…
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