Leo P: An Unquenched Very Low-Mass Galaxy
Kristen B. W. McQuinn, Evan D. Skillman, Andrew Dolphin, John M., Cannon, John J. Salzer, Katherine L. Rhode, Elizabeth A. K. Adams, Danielle, Berg, Riccardo Giovanelli, L\'eo Girardi, and Martha P.Haynes

TL;DR
Leo P is a gas-rich, low-mass galaxy with ongoing star formation, located at the edge of the Local Group, providing insights into star formation at extremely low rates and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
This study provides detailed distance, stellar population, and star formation history analysis of Leo P, revealing its isolated nature and minimal reionization impact.
Findings
Leo P has a distance of 1.62 Mpc, placing it at the Local Group edge.
Presence of massive stars indicates formation at very low star formation rates.
Star formation has been relatively constant over the galaxy's lifetime.
Abstract
Leo P is a low-luminosity dwarf galaxy discovered through the blind HI Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey. The HI and follow-up optical observations have shown that Leo P is a gas-rich dwarf galaxy with active star formation, an underlying older population, and an extremely low oxygen abundance. We have obtained optical imaging with the Hubble Space Telescope to two magnitudes below the red clump in order to study the evolution of Leo P. We refine the distance measurement to Leo P to be 1.62+/-0.15 Mpc, based on the luminosity of the horizontal branch stars and 10 newly identified RR Lyrae candidates. This places the galaxy at the edge of the Local Group, ~0.4 Mpc from Sextans B, the nearest galaxy in the NGC 3109 association of dwarf galaxies of which Leo P is clearly a member. The star responsible for ionizing the HII region is most likely an O7V or O8V spectral type, with a…
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