The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury VII. The NGC 4214 Starburst and the Effects of Star Formation History on Dwarf Morphology
Benjamin F. Williams, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Karoline M. Gilbert, Anil, C. Seth, Daniel R. Weisz, Evan D. Skillman, Andrew E. Dolphin

TL;DR
This study uses deep multi-wavelength Hubble observations to analyze the star formation history and morphology of the dwarf galaxy NGC 4214, revealing a predominantly old stellar population with recent starburst activity.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of NGC 4214's stellar populations across multiple wavelengths, demonstrating the galaxy's consistent ancient population and recent star formation increase.
Findings
Approximately 75% of stars are older than 8 Gyr.
Recent star formation rate increased starting 100 Myr ago.
Presence of very bright UV sources indicating massive, young stars.
Abstract
We present deep Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) optical observations obtained as part of the ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST) as well as early release Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) ultra-violet and infrared observations of the nearby dwarf starbursting galaxy NGC 4214. Our data provide a detailed example of how covering such a broad range in wavelength provides a powerful tool for constraining the physical properties of stellar populations. The deepest data reach the ancient red clump at M_F814W -0.2. All of the optical data reach the main sequence turnoff for stars younger than ~300 Myr, and the blue He burning sequence for stars younger than 500 Myr. The full CMD-fitting analysis shows that all three fields in our data set are consistent with ~75% of the stellar mass being older than 8 Gyr, in spite of showing a wide range in star formation rates at…
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