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A Ghost in Bo\'otes: The Least Luminous Disrupted Dwarf Galaxy

Authors :
Chandra, Vedant
Conroy, Charlie
Caldwell, Nelson
Bonaca, Ana
Naidu, Rohan P.
Zaritsky, Dennis
Cargile, Phillip A.
Han, Jiwon Jesse
Johnson, Benjamin D.
Speagle, Joshua S.
Ting, Yuan-Sen
Woody, Turner
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the discovery of Specter, a disrupted ultrafaint dwarf galaxy revealed by the H3 Spectroscopic Survey. We detected this structure via a pair of comoving metal-poor stars at a distance of 12.5 kpc, and further characterized it with Gaia astrometry and follow-up spectroscopy. Specter is a $25^\circ \times 1^\circ$ stream of stars that is entirely invisible until strict kinematic cuts are applied to remove the Galactic foreground. The spectroscopic members suggest a stellar age $\tau \gtrsim 12$ Gyr and a mean metallicity $\langle\text{[Fe/H]}\rangle = -1.84_{-0.18}^{+0.16}$, with a significant intrinsic metallicity dispersion $\sigma_{ \text{[Fe/H]}} = 0.37_{-0.13}^{+0.21}$. We therefore argue that Specter is the disrupted remnant of an ancient dwarf galaxy. With an integrated luminosity $M_{\text{V}} \approx -2.6$, Specter is by far the least-luminous dwarf galaxy stream known. We estimate that dozens of similar streams are lurking below the detection threshold of current search techniques, and conclude that spectroscopic surveys offer a novel means to identify extremely low surface brightness structures.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. Accepted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.13717
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac9b4b