Arp 220: A Post-Starburst Galaxy With Little Star Formation Outside of It's Nuclear Disks
R. Chandar, M. Caputo, S. Linden, A. Mok, B. C. Whitmore, D. Calzetti,, D. M. Elmegreen, J. C. Lee, L. Ubeda, R. White, and D. O. Cook

TL;DR
Arp 220 is a post-starburst galaxy with minimal recent star formation outside its nuclear disks, characterized by shock-ionized gas, young clusters near nuclei, and a history of continuous star formation interrupted around 100 million years ago.
Contribution
This study provides high-resolution imaging insights into the star formation history and shock phenomena in Arp 220, highlighting its post-starburst state and nuclear activity.
Findings
90% of Halpha emission from shock-ionized bubble near AGN
Star formation ceased ~100 million years ago outside nuclei
Presence of very young, low-mass clusters near nuclei
Abstract
The ultra-luminous infrared galaxy Arp2 20 is a late-stage merger with several tidal structures in the outskirts and two very compact, dusty nuclei that show evidence for extreme star formation and host at least one AGN. New and archival high-resolution images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope provide a state-of-the-art view of the structures, dust, and stellar clusters in Arp 220. We find that ~90% of the Halpha emission arises from a shock-ionized bubble emanating from the AGN in the western nucleus, while the nuclear disks dominate the Pbeta emission. Four very young (~3-6 Myr) but lower mass (< 10^4 Msun) clusters are detected in Halpha within a few arcsec of the nuclei, but produce less than 1% of the line emission. We see little evidence for a population of massive clusters younger than 100Myr anywhere in Arp 220. From the masses and ages of the detected clusters, we find that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
