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The Imprint of Reionization on the Star Formation Histories of Dwarf Galaxies (1405.5540v2)

Published 21 May 2014 in astro-ph.GA

Abstract: We explore the impact of cosmic reionization on nearby isolated dwarf galaxies using a compilation of SFHs estimated from deep HST data and a cosmological hydrodynamical simulation of the Local Group. The nearby dwarfs show a wide diversity of star formation histories; from ancient systems that have largely completed their star formation $\sim 10$ Gyr ago to young dwarfs that have formed the majority of their stars in the past $\sim 5$ Gyr to two-component systems characterized by the overlap of comparable numbers of old and young stars. Taken as an ensemble, star formation in nearby dwarfs dips to lower-than-average rates at intermediate times ($4<t$/Gyr $<8$), a feature that we trace in the simulation to the effects of cosmic reionization. Reionization heats the gas and drives it out of the shallow potential wells of low mass halos, affecting especially those below a sharp mass threshold that corresponds to a virial temperature of $\sim 2 \times 104 $ $\mathrm{K}$ at $z_{\rm reion}$. The loss of baryons leads to a sharp decline in the star forming activity of early-collapsing systems, which, compounded by feedback from early star formation, empties halos of gas and leaves behind systems where a single old stellar component prevails. In halos below the threshold at $z_{\rm reion}$, reionization heating leads to a delay in the onset of star formation that lasts until the halo grows massive enough to allow some of the remaining gas to cool and form stars. Young stellar components therefore dominate in dwarfs whose halos assemble late and thus form few stars before reionization. Two-component systems may be traced to late mergers of individual examples of the two aforementioned cases. The relative dearth of intermediate-age stars in nearby dwarfs might thus be the clearest signature yet identified of the imprint of cosmic reionization on the star formation history of dwarf galaxies.

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