The Star Formation History and Dust Content in the Far Outer Disc of M31
Edouard J. Bernard, Annette M. N. Ferguson, Michael K. Barker,, Sebastian L. Hidalgo, Rodrigo A. Ibata, Michael J. Irwin, Geraint F. Lewis,, Alan W. McConnachie, Matteo Monelli, Scott C. Chapman

TL;DR
This study investigates the star formation history and dust content in the far outer disc of M31, revealing a burst of star formation likely triggered by galaxy interaction and showing that the stellar populations formed in situ with significant dust and metal enrichment.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed star formation history of the outer disc of M31 using deep CMDs and links it to galaxy interactions, also analyzing dust distribution in relation to HI gas.
Findings
Star formation experienced a burst ~3 Gyr ago linked to M31-M33 interaction.
Outer disc stars largely formed in situ, not migrated from inner regions.
Dust distribution closely follows HI gas, indicating metal enrichment.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of two fields located 26 kpc (~5 scalelengths) from the centre of M31. One field samples the major axis populations--the Outer Disc field--while the other is offset by ~18' and samples the Warp in the stellar disc. The CMDs based on HST/ACS imaging reach old main-sequence turn-offs (~12.5 Gyr). We apply the CMD-fitting technique to the Warp field to reconstruct the star formation history (SFH). We find that after undergoing roughly constant SF until about 4.5 Gyr ago, there was a rapid decline in activity and then a ~1.5 Gyr lull, followed by a strong burst lasting 1.5 Gyr and responsible for 25% of the total stellar mass in this field. This burst appears to be accompanied by a decline in metallicity which could be a signature of the inflow of metal-poor gas. The onset of the burst (~3 Gyr ago) corresponds to the last close passage of M31 and M33 as…
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