Little Things
Deidre A. Hunter, Dana Ficut-Vicas, Trisha Ashley, Elias Brinks, Phil, Cigan, Bruce G. Elmegreen, Volker Heesen, Kimberly A. Herrmann, Megan, Johnson, Se-Heon, Michael P. Rupen, Andreas Schruba, Caroline E. Simpson,, Fabian Walter, David J. Westpfahl, Lisa M. Young

TL;DR
This study presents LITTLE THINGS, a comprehensive multi-wavelength survey of 41 nearby dwarf galaxies, aiming to understand the factors driving star formation by analyzing high-resolution HI data alongside UV, optical, and IR observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces LITTLE THINGS, a detailed multi-wavelength dataset of dwarf galaxies with high-quality HI observations, providing a valuable resource for studying star formation processes.
Findings
High-resolution HI maps reveal gas distribution and kinematics.
Multi-wavelength data enable analysis of star formation conditions.
The survey offers a publicly available dataset for further research.
Abstract
We present LITTLE THINGS (Local Irregulars That Trace Luminosity Extremes, The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey) that is aimed at determining what drives star formation in dwarf galaxies. This is a multi-wavelength survey of 37 Dwarf Irregular and 4 Blue Compact Dwarf galaxies that is centered around HI-line data obtained with the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) Very Large Array (VLA). The HI-line data are characterized by high sensitivity (less than 1.1 mJy/beam per channel), high spectral resolution (less than or equal to 2.6 km/s), and high angular resolution (~6 arcseconds. The LITTLE THINGS sample contains dwarf galaxies that are relatively nearby (less than or equal to 10.3 Mpc; 6 arcseconds is less than or equal to 300 pc), that were known to contain atomic hydrogen, the fuel for star formation, and that cover a large range in dwarf galactic properties. We describe our VLA…
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