Federico Lelli
ESO Garching
The formation and evolution of low-mass galaxies remain poorly understood. It is still unclear what physical processes are driving the star formation in these low-density systems and what are the actual effects of stellar feedback and gas outflows in their shallow potential wells. I will present several results on nearby, gas-rich, low-mass galaxies from a multi-wavelength campaign, including interferometric HI data, HST imaging, and recent MUSE and ALMA observations. I will focus on two key classes of low-mass objects: (1) starburst dwarfs that are experiencing unusually high levels of star-formation activity, and (2) tidal dwarfs that are forming out of collisional debris around interacting/merging galaxies. I will discuss our current view on the evolution of these systems and the implications for galaxy formation theories in LCDM.