Resolved stellar population of distant galaxies in the ELT era
L. Greggio, R. Falomo, S. Zaggia, D. Fantinel (INAF-OA Padova), M., Uslenghi (INAF-IASF)

TL;DR
Future Extremely Large Telescopes will enable detailed study of distant galaxy stellar populations through high-resolution photometry, revealing their star formation histories and metallicity distributions even in crowded fields.
Contribution
This paper demonstrates, through simulations, the potential of ELTs to accurately analyze stellar populations in distant galaxies, a significant advancement over current capabilities.
Findings
Accurate photometry achievable down to I~28.5 and J~27.5 in distant galaxy centers.
Stellar metallicity distributions can be recovered within ~0.1 dex.
Star formation histories can be reconstructed up to the Hubble time.
Abstract
The expected imaging capabilities of future Extremely Large Telescopes (ELTs) will offer the unique possibility to investigate the stellar population of distant galaxies from the photometry of the stars in very crowded fields. Using simulated images and photometric analysis we explore here two representative science cases aimed at recovering the characteristics of the stellar populations in the inner regions of distant galaxies. Specifically: case A) at the center of the disk of a giant spiral in the Centaurus Group, (mu B~21, distance of 4.6 Mpc); and, case B) at half of the effective radius of a giant elliptical in the Virgo Cluster (mu~19.5, distance of 18 Mpc). We generate synthetic frames by distributing model stellar populations and adopting a representative instrumental set up, i.e. a 42 m Telescope operating close to the diffraction limit. The effect of crowding is discussed in…
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