The Isaac Newton Telescope monitoring survey of Local Group dwarf galaxies. II. The star formation history of Andromeda I derived from long period variables
Elham Saremi, Atefeh Javadi, Mahdieh Navabi, Jacco Th.van Loon, Habib, G.Khosroshahi, Behzad Bojnordi Arbab, Iain McDonald

TL;DR
This study uses long-period variable stars observed with the Isaac Newton Telescope to reconstruct the star formation history of the Andromeda I dwarf galaxy, revealing a major star formation epoch around 6.6 billion years ago and recent activity about 800 million years ago.
Contribution
It introduces a methodology to estimate star formation history from LPV stars and applies it to Andromeda I, providing new insights into its evolutionary timeline.
Findings
Major star formation peak at 6.6 Gyr ago
Recent star formation activity around 800 Myr ago
Andromeda I is a late-quenching dwarf spheroidal galaxy
Abstract
An optical monitoring survey in the nearby dwarf galaxies was carried out with the 2.5-m Isaac Newton Telescope (INT). 55 dwarf galaxies and four isolated globular clusters in the Local Group (LG) were observed with the Wide Field Camera (WFC). The main aims of this survey are to identify the most evolved asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and red supergiants at the end-point of their evolution based on their pulsational instability, use their distribution over luminosity to reconstruct the star formation history (SFH), quantify the dust production and mass loss from modelling the multi-wavelength spectral energy distributions, and relate this to luminosity and radius variations. In this second of a series of papers, we present the methodology used to estimate SFH based on long-period variable (LPV) stars and then derive it for Andromeda\,I (And\,I) dwarf galaxy as an example of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
