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Astrophysics and Astronomy

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University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Star formation

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A Systematic Study Of The Stellar Populations And Ism In Galaxies Out To The Virgo Cluster: Near Field Cosmology Within A Representative Slice Of The Local Universe, Rolf A. Jansen, Paul Scowen, Matthew Beasley, John Gallagher, Robert O'Connell, Daniela Calzetti, Sally Oey, Rogier Windhorst, Robert Woodruff Apr 2009

A Systematic Study Of The Stellar Populations And Ism In Galaxies Out To The Virgo Cluster: Near Field Cosmology Within A Representative Slice Of The Local Universe, Rolf A. Jansen, Paul Scowen, Matthew Beasley, John Gallagher, Robert O'Connell, Daniela Calzetti, Sally Oey, Rogier Windhorst, Robert Woodruff

Astronomy Department Faculty Publication Series

We present a compelling case for a systematic and comprehensive study of the resolved and unresolved stellar populations, ISM, and immediate environments of galaxies throughout the local volume, defined here as D < 20 Mpc. This volume is our cosmic backyard and the smallest volume that encompasses environments as different as the Virgo, Ursa Major, Fornax and (perhaps) Eridanus clusters of galaxies, a large number and variety of galaxy groups, and several cosmic void regions. In each galaxy, through a pan-chromatic (160--1100nm) set of broad-band and diagnostic narrow-band filters, ISM structures and individual luminous stars to >~1 mag below the TRGB should be resolved on scales of <5 pc (at D <~ 20 Mpc, lambda ~ 800nm, for mu_I >~ 24 mag/arcsec^2 and m_{I,TRGB} <~ 27.5 mag). Resolved and unresolved stellar populations would be analyzed through color-magnitude and color-color diagram fitting and population synthesis modeling of multi-band colors and would yield physical properties such as spatially resolved star formation histories. The ISM within and around each galaxy would be analyzed using key narrow-band filters that distinguish photospheric from shock heating and provide information on the metallicity of the gas. Such a study would finally allow unraveling the global and spatially resolved star formation histories of galaxies, their assembly, satellite systems, and the dependences thereof on local and global environment within a truly representative cosmic volume. The proposed study is not feasible with current instrumentation but argues for a wide-field (>~250 arcmin^2), high-resolution (<~0.020"--0.065" [300--1000nm]), ultraviolet--near-infrared imaging facility on a 4m-class space-based observatory.