A spectroscopic confirmation of the Bootes II dwarf spheroidal
A. Koch, M.I. Wilkinson, J.T. Kleyna, M. Irwin, D.B. Zucker, V., Belokurov, G.F. Gilmore, M. Fellhauer, N.W. Evans

TL;DR
This study confirms Bootes II as a dwarf spheroidal galaxy through photometric and spectroscopic data, revealing its velocity, metallicity, and potential association with the Sagittarius stream, suggesting it may be a remnant of a larger galaxy.
Contribution
First spectroscopic confirmation of Bootes II, providing detailed velocity and metallicity measurements and exploring its possible origin and relation to the Sagittarius stream.
Findings
Bootes II has a mean velocity of -117 km/s.
It has a metallicity of about -1.79 dex.
Possible association with the Sagittarius stream.
Abstract
We present a new suite of photometric and spectroscopic data for the faint Bootes II dwarf spheroidal galaxy candidate. Our deep photometry, obtained with the INT/WFC, suggests a distance of 46 kpc and a small half-light radius of 4.0 arcmin (56 pc), consistent with previous estimates. Follow-up spectroscopy obtained with the Gemini/GMOS instrument yielded radial velocities and metallicities. While the majority of our targets covers a broad range in velocities and metallicities, we find five stars which share very similar velocities and metallicities and which are all compatible with the colors and magnitudes of the galaxy's likely red giant branch. We interpret these as a spectroscopic detection of the Bootes II system. These stars have a mean velocity of -117 km/s, a velocity dispersion of (10.5+-7.4) km/s and a mean [Fe/H] of -1.79 dex, with a dispersion of 0.14 dex. At this…
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