Discovery of New Dwarf Galaxies in the M81 Group
Kristin Chiboucas, Igor D. Karachentsev, R. Brent Tully

TL;DR
This study conducted a wide-area survey of the M81 galaxy group, discovering 22 new dwarf galaxy candidates and analyzing their properties to better understand galaxy formation and the dwarf galaxy population.
Contribution
It provides the first complete census of faint dwarf galaxies in the M81 group, revealing their properties and implications for cosmological models.
Findings
Detected 22 new dwarf galaxy candidates.
Measured a faint end slope of the luminosity function as -1.27.
Discussed the impact on galaxy formation theories.
Abstract
An order of magnitude more dwarf galaxies are expected to inhabit the Local Group, based on currently accepted galaxy formation models, than have been observed. This discrepancy has been noted in environments ranging from the field to rich clusters. However, no complete census of dwarf galaxies exist in any environment. The discovery of the smallest and faintest dwarfs is hampered by the limitations in detecting such faint and low surface brightness galaxies. An even greater difficulty is establishing distances to or group/cluster membership for such faint galaxies. The M81 group provides an almost unique opportunity for establishing membership for galaxies in a low density region complete to magnitudes as faint as M_{r'} = -10. With a distance modulus of 27.8, the tip of the red giant branch just resolves in ground-based surveys. We have surveyed a 65 square degree region around M81…
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