Bibcode
DOI
Hidalgo, S. L.; Marín-Franch, A.; Aparicio, A.
Bibliographical reference
The Astronomical Journal, Volume 125, Issue 3, pp. 1247-1260.
Advertised on:
3
2003
Citations
24
Refereed citations
22
Description
The morphological properties and spatial distribution of stellar
populations are studied for DDO 165 and DDO 181, two dwarf irregular
(dIrr) galaxies outside the Local Group. The study uses B and R
photometry from which are derived (1) color-magnitude diagrams of the
resolved stars, (2) surface brightness profiles for the unresolved
stars, and (3) surface brightness fluctuations (SBFs) originating in the
unresolved population. This information allows us to reach the following
conclusions for both galaxies: (1) the distances are estimated to be
4.8+/-0.8 Mpc for DDO 165 and 4.4+/-0.4 Mpc for DDO 181, which imply
that the first is a field galaxy lying between the M81 and M101 groups
and the second is a member of the Canes Venatici group; (2) both
galaxies have experienced a recent star formation burst and show
important stellar populations younger than 50 Myr; (3) both galaxies
show low surface brightness structures much larger than their main
resolved bodies and extending considerably beyond the Holmberg radii;
(4) population synthesis based on SBFs shows that the average ages and
metallicities of the stellar population of these extended regions are,
on average, older than 5 Gyr and more metal-poor than Z=0.0015 for DDO
165 and older than 7 Gyr and more metal-poor than Z=0.0008 for DDO 181;
(5) the former results indicate that really old low-metallicity stars
probably exist in the extended regions, but nothing can be stated about
the presence or not of an intermediate-age population in these regions.
The latter is relevant in the characterization of the nature of the
extended underlying structures that are being systematically discovered
in dIrr galaxies. The question of whether or not these structures are a
relic of the primeval star formation activity of the galaxy is
fundamental for understanding the formation and early evolution of dwarf
galaxies. However, although the SBF population synthesis technique shows
promise in the study of unresolved stellar populations, it is not
sufficient, in this case, for determining the nature of the extended
regions and, in particular, for ascertaining whether they are populated
only by very old stars (driving to a two-differentiated-component
structure, of the halo/disk kind in spiral galaxies) or whether they are
populated by a mixture of old and intermediate-age stars (suggesting a
scenario in which the star-forming region of the galaxy is shrinking
with time).