Studies of the stellar populations of galaxies using two-color diagrams
Alexander S. Gusev, Svetlana A. Guslyakova, Alexandra P. Novikova,, Maria S. Khramtsova, Vasily V. Bruevich, and Olga V. Ezhkova

TL;DR
This study analyzes galaxy stellar populations using two-color diagrams, considering various star-formation models, and applies surface photometry to 26 galaxies to infer their star-formation histories and structural features.
Contribution
It introduces a method to estimate stellar population composition and star-formation history from two-color diagrams, considering secondary bursts and applying it to diverse galaxy components.
Findings
Secondary bursts can shift galaxy positions on two-color diagrams.
10 of 26 galaxies show signs of secondary star formation bursts.
Photometric differences are observed between early and late-type galaxies.
Abstract
Variations in the photometric parameters of stellar systems as a function of their evolution and the stellar populations comprising them are investigated. A set of seven evolutionary models with an exponential decrease in the star-formation rate and 672 models with a secondary burst of star formation are considered. The occurrence of a secondary burst of star formation can shift the position of a stellar system on two-color diagrams to the right or left of the normal color sequence for galaxies and the extinction line. This makes it possible to estimate the composition of the stellar population of a galaxy with a nonmonotonic star formation history from its position on two-color diagrams. Surface photometry in both the optical (UBVRI) and near-IR (JHK) is used to study the stellar populations and star-formation histories in the structural components (nucleus, bulge, disk, spiral arms,…
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