"Observations" of simulated dwarf galaxies: Star-formation histories from color-magnitude diagrams
Shivangee Rathi, Michele Mastropietro, Sven De Rijcke, Carme Gallart,, Edouard Bernard, and Robbert Verbeke

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that star-formation histories of simulated dwarf galaxies can be accurately recovered from synthetic color-magnitude diagrams, accounting for observational effects like dust, thus bridging the gap between simulations and real observations.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to compare simulated dwarf galaxy properties with observations by constructing and analyzing synthetic CMDs, including dust effects, to recover true star-formation histories.
Findings
Recovered SFHs closely match true SFHs in simulations.
Dust causes underestimation of recent star formation rates.
Near-IR CMDs provide consistent SFH recovery.
Abstract
Apparent deviations between properties of dwarf galaxies from observations and simulations are known to exist, such as the "Missing Dwarfs" problem, the too-big-to-fail problem, and the cusp-core problem, to name a few. Recent studies have shown that these issues can at least be partially resolved by taking into account the systematic differences between simulations and observations. This work aims to investigate and address any systematic differences affecting the comparison of simulations with observations. To this aim, we analyzed a set of 24 realistically simulated MoRIA (Models of Realistic dwarfs In Action) dwarf galaxies in an observationally motivated way. We first constructed "observed" color-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) of the simulated dwarf galaxies in the typically used V- and I-bands. Then we used the CMD-fitting method to recover their star-formation histories (SFHs) from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
