Unveiling the purely young star formation history of the SMC's northeastern shell from colour-magnitude diagram fitting
Joanna D. Sakowska, Noelia E. D. No\"el, Tom\'as Ruiz-Lara, Carme, Gallart, Pol Massana, David L. Nidever, Santi Cassisi, Patricio Correa-Amaro,, Yumi Choi, Gurtina Besla, Denis Erkal, David Mart\'inez-Delgado, Matteo, Monelli, Knut A. G. Olsen, Guy S. Stringfellow

TL;DR
This study reconstructs the recent star formation history of the Small Magellanic Cloud's northeastern shell using advanced CMD fitting techniques, revealing young stellar populations and their relation to galactic interactions.
Contribution
Introduces a novel CMD fitting method incorporating line-of-sight depth using red clump stars, enabling more accurate SFH reconstruction of the SMC's shell.
Findings
Shell mainly contains stars younger than 500 Myrs
Star formation peaks at approximately 250 Myr and 450 Myr
Correlation between shell SFH and LMC's northern arm
Abstract
We obtain a quantitative star formation history (SFH) of a shell-like structure ('shell') located in the northeastern part of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We use the Survey of the MAgellanic Stellar History (SMASH) to derive colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs), reaching below the oldest main-sequence turnoff, from which we compute the SFHs with CMD fitting techniques. We present, for the first time, a novel technique that uses red clump (RC) stars from the CMDs to assess and account for the SMC's line-of-sight depth effect present during the SFH derivation. We find that accounting for this effect recovers a more accurate SFH. We quantify a 7 kpc line-of-sight depth present in the CMDs, in good agreement with depth estimates from RC stars in the northeastern SMC. By isolating the stellar content of the northeastern shell and incorporating the line-of-sight depth into our calculations,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Exploration and Technology · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
