A close look at the Centaurus A group of galaxies II. Intermediate-age populations in early-type dwarfs
D. Crnojevi\'c (1), M. Rejkuba (2), E. K. Grebel (1), G. Da Costa (3),, H. Jerjen (3) ((1) Astronomisches Rechen-Institut, Zentrum fuer Astronomie, der Universitaet Heidelberg, Germany, (2) European Southern Observatory,, Garching, Germany

TL;DR
This study analyzes the stellar populations of early-type dwarf galaxies in the Centaurus A group, revealing low fractions of intermediate-age stars and suggesting a possible correlation with proximity to the central galaxy.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed assessment of intermediate-age populations in CenA group dwarfs using combined optical and infrared data, highlighting differences from Milky Way dwarfs.
Findings
Intermediate-age populations are up to 15% of total stars.
Intermediate-age stars are more centrally concentrated in ESO269-066.
Dwarfs near CenA have lower intermediate-age fractions than Milky Way counterparts.
Abstract
We investigate the resolved stellar content of early-type dwarf galaxies in the CenA group, in order to estimate the fraction of their intermediate-age populations. We use near-infrared photometric data taken with the VLT/ISAAC instrument, together with previously analyzed archival HST/ACS data. The combination of the optical and infrared wavelength range permits us to firmly identify luminous asymptotic giant branch stars, which are indicative of an intermediate-age population in these galaxies. We consider one dwarf spheroidal (CenA-dE1) and two dwarf elliptical (SGC1319.1-4216 and ESO269-066) galaxies that are dominated by an old population. The most recent periods of star formation are estimated to have taken place between ~2 and ~5 Gyr ago for SGC1319.1-4216 and ESO269-066, and approximately 9 Gyr ago for CenA-dE1. For ESO269-066, we find that the intermediate-age populations are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
