Abstract | Deep g'r'i'z' images obtained with the Gemini Multiobject Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini North are used to investigate the stellar content in the outer regions of the nearby Sc galaxies NGC 2403 and M33. The field observed in NGC 2403 covers galactocentric distances between 5 and 11 kpc perpendicular to the line of sight (RLOSGC) and 7 and 19 kpc along the plane of the disk (RdiskGC). The red giant branch (RGB) tip occurs at i'=23.6+/-0.1, and the Cepheid and RGB-tip distance scales for NGC 2403 are in good agreement. The number density of bright main-sequence stars in this field experiences a steep cutoff at RdiskGC~10 kpc, which is consistent with the expected truncation radius of the disk predicted from studies of edge-on spiral galaxies. While very young stars are restricted to RdiskGC<10 kpc, a population of bright asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars is present throughout the entire GMOS field, indicating that star formation occurred outside of the present-day star-forming disk of NGC 2403 during intermediate epochs. The AGB stars are not in a tidal stream; in fact, the ratio of AGB stars above the RGB tip to those below the RGB tip does not change with radius, indicating that the bright AGB stars are uniformly mixed with the fainter stellar content throughout the field. The AGB luminosity function (LF) scales with r-band surface brightness over a wide range of radii throughout the main body of NGC 2403, indicating that the age distribution of stars in the outer regions of the present-day star-forming disk is not skewed to younger values than in the inner disk. Based on the color of stars on the upper portions of the RGB, it is concluded that metallicity changes across the field, with [Fe/H]=-0.8+/-0.1(random)+/-0.3(systematic) at RLOSGC=5 kpc, and [Fe/H]=-2.2+/-0.2(random)+/-0.8(systematic) at RLOSGC=11 kpc. The M33 field samples RLOSGC between 8 and 10 kpc and RdiskGC between 14 and 17 kpc. Bright AGB stars are detected in this field, and the ratio of bright AGB stars to stars on the upper RGB is at least as large as that measured in the outer regions of NGC 2403; thus, an intermediate-age population occurs well outside of the young star-forming disk of M33. The color of stars on the upper RGB suggests that [Fe/H]=-1.0+/-0.3(random)+/-0.3(systematic) in this field. The globular cluster systems of both NGC 2403 and M33 contain objects that formed during intermediate epochs, and it is suggested that the luminous AGB stars detected in the current study are the field counterparts of these clusters. The detection of intermediate-age stars in the outer regions of these galaxies is consistent with models in which late-type spiral galaxies formed more slowly than earlier-type systems. Based on observations obtained at the Gemini Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation, on behalf of the Gemini partnership: the NSF, the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (UK), the National Research Council of Canada (Canada), CONICYT (Chile), the Australian Research Council (Australia), CNPq (Brazil), and CONICET (Argentina). |