We present deep Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2)
optical observations obtained as part of the ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury
(ANGST) as well as early release Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) ultra-violet and
infrared observations of the nearby dwarf starbursting galaxy NGC 4214. Our
data provide a detailed example of how covering such a broad range in
wavelength provides a powerful tool for constraining the physical properties of
stellar populations. The deepest data reach the ancient red clump at M_F814W
-0.2. All of the optical data reach the main sequence turnoff for stars younger
than ~300 Myr, and the blue He burning sequence for stars younger than 500 Myr.
The full CMD-fitting analysis shows that all three fields in our data set are
consistent with ~75% of the stellar mass being older than 8 Gyr, in spite of
showing a wide range in star formation rates at the present day. Thus, our
results suggest that the scale length of NGC 4214 has remained relatively
constant for many Gyr. As previously noted by others, we also find the galaxy
has recently ramped up production, consistent with its bright UV luminosity and
its population of UV-bright massive stars. In the central field we find UV
point sources with F336W magnitudes as bright as -9.9. These are as bright as
stars with masses of at least 52-56 M_sun and ages near 4 Myr in stellar
evolution models. Assuming a standard IMF, our CMD is well-fitted by an
increase in star formation rate beginning 100 Myr ago. The stellar populations
of this late-type dwarf are compared with those of NGC 404, an early-type dwarf
that is also the most massive galaxy in its local environment. The late-type
dwarf appears to have a similar high fraction of ancient stars, suggesting that
these dominant galaxies may form at early epochs even if they have low total
mass and very different present-day morphologies.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Ap