Discovery and analysis of three faint dwarf galaxies and a globular cluster in the outer halo of the Andromeda galaxy
Date
2006-10-01
Authors
Martin, N. F.
Ibata, R. A.
Irwin, M. J.
Chapman, S.
Lewis, G. F.
Ferguson, A. M. N.
Tanvir, N.
McConnachie, A. W.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
We present the discovery of three faint dwarf galaxies and a globular cluster in the halo of the Andromeda galaxy (M31), found in our MegaCam survey that spans the southern quadrant of M31, from a projected distance of ~50 kpc to \~150 kpc. Though the survey covers 57 sq. degrees, the four satellites lie within 2\deg of one another. We estimate that the globular cluster lies at a total distance of 175+/-55 kpc from M31, making it the farthest M31 globular cluster known. It also shows the typical characteristics of a bright globular cluster, with a half-light radius of 2.3+/-0.2 pc and an absolute magnitude in the V band of M_{V,0}=-8.5+/-0.3 and contains a very old population with a metallicity of [Fe/H]~-1.3. The three dwarf galaxies are all very faint, with absolute magnitudes in the range -7.3<M_{V,0}<-6.4, and show strikingly similar characteristics with metallicities of [Fe/H]~-1.4 and half-light radii of \~120+/-45 pc, making these dwarf galaxies two to three times smaller than the smallest previously known satellites of M31. We estimate them to be between 740 and 955 kpc from the Sun. Extrapolating from the coverage of the survey, we estimate that up to 45+/-20 satellites brighter than M_V~-6.5 should be orbiting M31. Hence faint dwarf galaxies cannot alone account for the missing satellites that are predicted by $\Lambda$CDM models, unless they reside in dark matter mini-halos that are more massive than the typical masse of 10^7 solar masses currently inferred from their central radial velocity dispersion. (abridged)
Description
Keywords
Citation
Martin, N. F., R. A. Ibata, M. J. Irwin, S. Chapman, et al. 2006. "Discovery and analysis of three faint dwarf galaxies and a globular cluster in the outer halo of the Andromeda galaxy." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 371(4): 1983-1991