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The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury I. The Star Formation History of the M81 Outer Disk

Authors :
Williams, Benjamin F.
Dalcanton, Julianne J.
Seth, Anil C.
Weisz, Daniel
Dolphin, Andrew
Skillman, Evan
Harris, Jason
Holtzman, Jon
Girardi, Leo
de Jong, Roelof S.
Olsen, Knut
Cole, Andrew
Gallart, Carme
Gogarten, Stephanie M.
Hidalgo, Sebastian L.
Mateo, Mario
Rosema, Keith
Stetson, Peter B.
Quinn, Thomas
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

The ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury (ANGST) is a large Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) treasury program to obtain resolved stellar photometry for a volume-limited sample of galaxies out to 4 Mpc. As part of this program, we have obtained deep ACS imaging of a field in the outer disk of the large spiral galaxy M81. The field contains the outskirts of a spiral arm as well as an area containing no current star formation. Our imaging results in a color-magnitude diagram (CMD) reaching to F814W = 28.8 and F606W = 29.5, one magnitude fainter than the red clump. Through detailed modeling of the full CMD, we quantify the age and metallicity distribution of the stellar populations contained in the field. The mean metallicity in the field is -1<[M/H]<0 and only a small fraction of stars have ages <~1 Gyr. The results show that most of the stars in this outer disk field were formed by z~1 and that the arm structure at this radius has a lifetime of >~100 Myr. We discuss the measured evolution of the M81 disk in the context of surveys of high-redshift disk galaxies and deep stellar photometry of other nearby galaxies. All of these indicate that massive spiral disks are mostly formed by z~1 and that they have experienced rapid metal enrichment.<br />Comment: 26 pages, 2 tables, 18 figures, accepted for publication in AJ

Subjects

Subjects :
Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0810.2557
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/137/1/419