Delayed Star Formation in Isolated Dwarf Galaxies: HST Star Formation History of the Aquarius Dwarf Irregular
Andrew A. Cole, Daniel R. Weisz, Andrew E. Dolphin, Evan D. Skillman,, Alan W. McConnachie, Alyson M. Brooks, Ryan Leaman

TL;DR
This study uses deep HST imaging to reveal that the Aquarius dwarf irregular galaxy experienced a significant delay in star formation, with most stars forming only in the last 6-8 billion years, challenging existing galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It provides detailed star formation history of an isolated dwarf galaxy, showing delayed star formation not explained by dark matter accretion, and compares observations with cosmological simulations.
Findings
Only ~10% of stars formed more than 10 Gyr ago.
Star formation increased dramatically 6-8 Gyr ago.
Delayed star formation is common in isolated dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We have obtained deep images of the highly isolated (d = 1 Mpc) Aquarius dwarf irregular galaxy (DDO 210) with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The resulting color-magnitude diagram (CMD) reaches more than a magnitude below the oldest main-sequence turnoff, allowing us to derive the star formation history (SFH) over the entire lifetime of the galaxy with a timing precision of ~10% of the lookback time. Using a maximum likelihood fit to the CMD we find that only ~10% of all star formation in Aquarius took place more than 10 Gyr ago (lookback time equivalent to redshift z ~2). The star formation rate increased dramatically ~6-8 Gyr ago (z ~ 0.7-1.1) and then declined until the present time. The only known galaxy with a more extreme confirmed delay in star formation is Leo A, a galaxy of similar M(HI)/M(stellar), dynamical mass, mean metallicity, and…
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