Anatomy of a post-starburst minor merger: a multi-wavelength WFC3 study of NGC 4150
R. Mark Crockett (1), Sugata Kaviraj (1,2), Joseph I. Silk (1),, Bradley C. Whitmore (3), Robert W. O'Connell (4), Max Mutchler (3), Bruce, Balick (5), Howard E. Bond (3), Daniela Calzetti (6), C. Marcella Carollo, (7), Michael J. Disney (8), Michael A. Dopita (9)

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength HST imaging to analyze the recent star formation and merger history of NGC 4150, revealing it as a minor merger with significant implications for early-type galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides a detailed spatially-resolved analysis of recent star formation and merger signatures in NGC 4150, highlighting the role of minor mergers in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Recent star formation age ~0.9 Gyr
Minor merger with satellite mass ~3x10^8 Msun
Star formation contributes 2-3% of stellar mass
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a spatially-resolved near-UV/optical study of NGC 4150, using the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) on board the Hubble Space Telescope. Previous studies of this early-type galaxy (ETG) indicate that it has a large reservoir of molecular gas, exhibits a kinematically decoupled core (likely indication of recent merging) and strong, central H_B absorption (indicative of young stars). The core of NGC 4150 shows ubiquitous near-UV emission and remarkable dusty substructure. Our analysis shows this galaxy to lie in the near-UV green valley, and its pixel-by-pixel photometry exhibits a narrow range of near-UV/optical colours that are similar to those of nearby E+A (post-starburst) galaxies. We parametrise the properties of the recent star formation (age, mass fraction, metallicity and internal dust content) in the NGC 4150 pixels by comparing the observed near-UV/optical…
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