A recently quenched isolated dwarf galaxy outside of the Local Group environment
Ava Polzin, Pieter van Dokkum, Shany Danieli, Johnny P. Greco, Aaron, J. Romanowsky

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a rare, isolated, quenched dwarf galaxy outside the Local Group, providing new insights into galaxy quenching mechanisms in low-mass, isolated environments.
Contribution
It presents the first known example of an isolated quenched dwarf galaxy outside the Local Group, expanding understanding of galaxy evolution in low-density regions.
Findings
Galaxy is at 22 Mpc distance with no significant H-alpha emission.
Star formation ceased recently, indicated by blue stars and weak Dn4000 break.
Likely quenched due to internal feedback mechanisms.
Abstract
We report the serendipitous identification of a low mass (), isolated, likely quenched dwarf galaxy in the "foreground" of the COSMOS-CANDELS field. From deep Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging we infer a surface brightness fluctuation distance for COSMOS-dw1 of Mpc, which is consistent with its radial velocity of km s via Keck/LRIS. At this distance, the galaxy is 1.4 Mpc in projection from its nearest massive neighbor. We do not detect significant H emission (EW(H) angstroms), suggesting that COSMOS dw1 is likely quenched. Very little is currently known about isolated quenched galaxies in this mass regime. Such galaxies are thought to be rare, as there is no obvious mechanism to permanently stop star formation in them; to date there are only four…
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