The UK Infrared Telescope M33 monitoring project. II. The star formation history in the central square kiloparsec
Atefeh Javadi (IPM, Iran, Keele University, UK), Jacco Th. van Loon, (Keele), Mohammad Taghi Mirtorabi (Alzahra University, Iran)

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared monitoring of M33 to reconstruct its star formation history, revealing two major epochs of star formation and distinct spatial distributions for different stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed star formation history of M33's central kiloparsec, including spatial distribution analysis of various stellar populations and insights into galaxy evolution.
Findings
Star formation rate varied between 0.002 and 0.007 M$_\odot$ yr^-1 kpc^-2.
Two epochs of enhanced star formation: >6 Gyr ago and around 250 Myr ago.
Old stars follow a spheroidal distribution, younger stars follow a flat disc.
Abstract
We have conducted a near-infrared monitoring campaign at the UK InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT), of the Local Group spiral galaxy M33 (Triangulum). The main aim was to identify stars in the very final stage of their evolution, and for which the luminosity is more directly related to the birth mass than the more numerous less-evolved giant stars that continue to increase in luminosity. In this second paper of the series, we construct the birth mass function and hence derive the star formation history. The star formation rate has varied between ~0.002 and 0.007 M yr^-1 kpc^-2. We give evidence of two epochs of a star formation rate enhanced by a factor of a few -- one that happened \geq 6 Gyr ago and produced \geq 80% of the total mass in stars, and one around 250 Myr ago that lasted ~ 200 Myr and formed \leq 6% of the mass in stars. We construct radial and azimuthal distributions in…
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