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Ships Passing in the Night: Spectroscopic Analysis of Two Ultra-Faint Satellites in the Constellation Carina

Authors :
Li, T. S.
Simon, J. D.
Pace, A. B.
Torrealba, G.
Kuehn, K.
Drlica-Wagner, A.
Bechtol, K.
Vivas, A. K.
van der Marel, R. P.
Wood, M.
Yanny, B.
Belokurov, V.
Jethwa, P.
Zucker, D. B.
Lewis, G.
Kron, R.
Nidever, D. L.
Sánchez-Conde, M. A.
Ji, A. P.
Conn, B. C.
James, D. J.
Martin, N. F.
Martinez-Delgado, D.
Noël, N. E. D.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We present Magellan/IMACS, Anglo-Australian Telescope/AAOmega+2dF, and Very Large Telescope/GIRAFFE+FLAMES spectroscopy of the CarinaII (Car II) & Carina III (Car III) dwarf galaxy candidates, recently discovered in the Magellanic Satellites Survey (MagLiteS). We identify 18 member stars in Car II, including 2 binaries with variable radial velocities and 2 RR Lyrae stars. The other 14 members have a mean heliocentric velocity $v_{\rm hel} = 477.2 \pm 1.2$ km/s and a velocity dispersion of $\sigma_v = 3.4^{+1.2}_{-0.8}$ km/s. Assuming Car II is in dynamical equilibrium, we derive a total mass within the half-light radius of $1.0^{+0.8}_{-0.4} \times 10^{6} M_\odot$, indicating a mass-to-light ratio of $369^{+309}_{-161} M_\odot/L_\odot$. From equivalent width measurements of the calcium triplet lines of 9 RGB stars, we derive a mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = $-2.44 \pm 0.09$ with dispersion $\sigma_{\rm [Fe/H]} = 0.22 ^{+0.10}_{-0.07}$. Considering both the kinematic and chemical properties, we conclude that Car II is a dark-matter-dominated dwarf galaxy. For Car III, we identify 4 member stars, from which we calculate a systemic velocity of $v_{\rm hel} = 284.6^{+3.4}_{-3.1}$ km/s. The brightest RGB member of Car III has a metallicity of [Fe/H] $= -1.97 \pm 0.12$. Due to the small size of the Car III spectroscopic sample, we cannot conclusively determine its nature. Although these two systems have the smallest known physical separation ($\Delta d\sim10~kpc$) among Local Group satellites, the large difference in their systemic velocities, $\sim200$ km/s, indicates that they are unlikely to be a bound pair. One or both systems are likely associated with the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), and may remain LMC satellites today. No statistically significant excess of $\gamma$-rays emission is found at the locations of Car II and Car III in eight years of Fermi-LAT data.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1802.06810
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aab666