A Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopic survey of the faint M31 satellites And XV and And XVI
B. Letarte, S. C. Chapman, M. Collins, R. A. Ibata, M. J. Irwin, A. M., N. Ferguson, G. F. Lewis, N. Martin, A. McConnachie, N. Tanvir

TL;DR
This spectroscopic survey of M31 satellites And XV and And XVI reveals their velocities, metallicities, and distances, providing insights into their dynamics and composition, and suggesting different orbital characteristics and potential escape status.
Contribution
The study provides the first detailed spectroscopic analysis of these faint satellites, refining their distances, velocities, metallicities, and orbital properties, which were previously uncertain.
Findings
And XV is more distant than previously thought, at ~770 kpc.
And XV has a resolved velocity dispersion of ~11 km/s.
And XVI's velocity suggests it may be approaching escape velocity.
Abstract
We present the results of a spectroscopic survey of the recently discovered M31 satellites And XV and And XVI, lying at projected distances from the centre of M31 of 93 and 130 kpc respectively. These satellites lie to the South of M31, in regions of the stellar halo which wide field imaging has revealed as relative voids (compared to the degree-scale coherent stream-like structures). Using the DEep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph mounted on the Keck II telescope, we have defined probable members of these satellites, for which we derive radial velocities as precise as ~6 km/s down to i~21.5. While the distance to And XVI remains the same as previously reported (525pm50 kpc), we have demonstrated that the brightest three stars previously used to define the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) in And XV are in fact Galactic, and And XV is actually likely to be much more distant at 770pm70…
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