The ISLAndS project II: The Lifetime Star Formation Histories of Six Andromeda dSphs
Evan D. Skillman, Matteo Monelli, Daniel R. Weisz, Sebastian L., Hidalgo, Antonio Aparicio, Edouard J. Bernard, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Santi, Cassisi, Andrew A. Cole, Andrew E. Dolphin, Henry C. Ferguson, Carme Gallart,, Mike J. Irwin, Nicolas F. Martin

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble data to analyze the star formation histories of six Andromeda dwarf spheroidal galaxies, revealing diverse histories and comparing them to Milky Way satellites to understand environmental effects on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First detailed comparison of Andromeda and Milky Way dwarf spheroidal star formation histories using deep Hubble imaging.
Findings
Variety of SFHs not correlated with luminosity or distance
Quenching times range from 9 to 6 Gyr ago
No evidence of complete quenching by reionization
Abstract
The Initial Star formation and Lifetimes of Andromeda Satellites (ISLAndS) project uses Hubble Space Telescope imaging to study a representative sample of six Andromeda dSph satellite companion galaxies. The main goal of the program is to determine whether the star formation histories (SFHs) of the Andromeda dSph satellites demonstrate significant statistical differences from those of the Milky Way, which may be attributable to the different properties of their local environments. Our observations reach the oldest main sequence turn-offs, allowing a time resolution at the oldest ages of ~ 1 Gyr, which is comparable to the best achievable resolution in the MW satellites. We find that the six dSphs present a variety of SFHs that are not strictly correlated with luminosity or present distance from M31. Specifically, we find a significant range in quenching times (lookback times from 9 to 6…
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