Comparing M31 and Milky Way Satellites: The Extended Star Formation Histories of Andromeda II and Andromeda XVI
Daniel R. Weisz, Evan D. Skillman, Sebastian L. Hidalgo, Matteo, Monelli, Andrew E. Dolphin, Alan McConnachie, Edouard J. Bernard, Carme, Gallart, Antonio Aparicio, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Santi Cassisi, Andrew A., Cole, Henry C. Ferguson, Mike Irwin, Nicolas F. Martin

TL;DR
This study compares the star formation histories of M31 satellites Andromeda II and XVI, revealing similarities and differences with Milky Way satellites, and suggests satellite evolution varies among host galaxies.
Contribution
First detailed comparison of M31 and MW satellite star formation histories, highlighting differences and similarities in their evolutionary paths.
Findings
Both satellites formed 50-70% of their stars between 12.5 and 5 Gyr ago.
Andromeda XVI has a significant intermediate-age population, unlike MW faint companions.
Satellite galaxy evolution may differ substantially among hosts of similar stellar mass.
Abstract
We present the first comparison between the lifetime star formation histories (SFHs) of M31 and Milky Way (MW) satellites. Using the Advanced Camera for Surveys aboard the Hubble Space Telescope, we obtained deep optical imaging of Andromeda II (M12.0; log(M/M) 6.7) and Andromeda XVI (M7.5; log(M/M) 4.9) yielding color-magnitude diagrams that extend at least 1 magnitude below the oldest main sequence turnoff, and are similar in quality to those available for the MW companions. And II and And XVI show strikingly similar SFHs: both formed 50-70% of their total stellar mass between 12.5 and 5 Gyr ago (z5-0.5) and both were abruptly quenched 5 Gyr ago (z0.5). The predominance of intermediate age populations in And XVI makes it qualitatively different from faint companions of the MW and clearly not a…
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