How old are the stars in the halo of NGC 5128 (Centaurus A)?
M. Rejkuba (1), W. E. Harris (2), L. Greggio (3), G. L. H. Harris (4), ((1) ESO, Germany, (2) McMaster University, Canada, (3) Padova Observatory,, Italy, Waterloo University, Canada)

TL;DR
This study uses deep photometry to determine that the majority of halo stars in NGC 5128 formed over 10 billion years ago, with a minor younger component indicating a brief later star formation event.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed star formation history of NGC 5128's halo, showing rapid early enrichment and limited extended star formation.
Findings
Majority of halo stars formed over 10 Gyr ago.
Chemical enrichment was very rapid, reaching solar metallicity by 11-12 Gyr ago.
A minor younger component (~2-4 Gyr old) accounts for 20-30% of stars.
Abstract
NGC 5128 (Centaurus A) is, at the distance of just 3.8 Mpc, the nearest easily observable giant elliptical galaxy. Therefore it is the best target to investigate the early star formation history of an elliptical galaxy. Our aims are to establish when the oldest stars formed in NGC 5128, and whether this galaxy formed stars over a long period. We compare simulated colour-magnitude diagrams with the deep ACS/HST photometry. We find that that the observed colour-magnitude diagram can be reproduced satisfactorily only by simulations that have the bulk of the stars with ages in excess of ~10 Gyr, and that the alpha-enhanced models fit the data much better than the solar scaled ones. Data are not consistent with extended star formation over more than 3-4 Gyr. Two burst models, with 70-80% of the stars formed 12+/-1 Gyr ago and with 20-30% younger contribution with 2-4 Gyr old stars provide…
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