Modeling the Effects of Star Formation Histories on Halpha and Ultra-Violet Fluxes in Nearby Dwarf Galaxies
Daniel R. Weisz, Benjamin D. Johnson, L. Clifton Johnson, Evan D., Skillman, Janice C. Lee, Robert C. Kennicutt, Daniela Calzetti, Liese van, Zee, Matthew Bothwell, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Daniel A. Dale, Benjamin F., Williams

TL;DR
This study models how non-constant star formation histories affect Halpha and UV flux indicators in nearby dwarf galaxies, showing variable SFHs can explain observed flux ratios better than constant SFR or variable IMF models.
Contribution
Introduces a set of stochastic, bursty star formation history models that better match observed flux ratios in dwarf galaxies compared to previous assumptions.
Findings
Bursty SFHs explain low-mass galaxy flux ratios
Variable SFHs reproduce observed scatter without extra mechanisms
Constant SFR models fail to match low-mass galaxy data
Abstract
We consider the effects of non-constant star formation histories (SFHs) on Halpha and GALEX far ultra-violet (FUV) star formation rate (SFR) indicators. Under the assumption of a fully populated Chabrier IMF, we compare the distribution of Halpha-to-FUV flux ratios from ~ 1500 simple, periodic model SFHs with observations of 185 galaxies from the Spitzer Local Volume Legacy survey. We find a set of SFH models that are well matched to the data, such that more massive galaxies are best characterized by nearly constant SFHs, while low mass systems experience bursts amplitudes of ~ 30 (i.e., an increase in the SFR by a factor of 30 over the SFR during the inter-burst period), burst durations of tens of Myr, and periods of ~ 250 Myr; these SFHs are broadly consistent with the increased stochastic star formation expected in systems with lower SFRs. We analyze the predicted temporal evolution…
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