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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2015
Ever since their discovery, blue compact dwarf (BCD) galaxies have been thought of as excellent candidates for being young galaxies, i.e. systems presently undergoing one of their very first bursts of star formation. This is mainly because BCDs are very metal-deficient, the metallicities of their ionized gas ranging between Zʘ/50 and Zʘ/3, which makes them the least chemically evolved galaxies in the Universe. Other evidence, such as the very high fractional neutral hydrogen gas content and the lack of an evident underlying old stellar population on optical images, also point to the relative youth of some BCDs.
Thuan, Izotov h Lipovetsky (1997) have argued SBS 0335-052 to be a young galaxy on the basis of the following evidence: 1) HST imaging of the BCD shows its underlying extended low surface brightness component to have an irregular and filamentary structure, suggesting that a significant part of the emission (~1/3) comes not from an underlying stellar population, but from ionized gas. Any underlying stellar population must be younger than ~108yr. Propagating star formation occurs in a chain of 6 super-star clusters with ages ranging between 4 and 30 Myr. 2) The underlying component shows unusually blue colors consistent with gaseous emission, in contrast to most BCDs which possess an underlying red component. 3) VLA 21 cm observations show the BCD to be embedded in an extraordinarily large HI cloud with dimensions some 64 × 24 kpc (the typical size of HI envelopes around BCDs is more like a few kpc in each dimension).