An Ultra Compact Dwarf around the Sombrero galaxy (M104): the Nearest Massive UCD
George K. T. Hau, Lee R. Spitler, Duncan A. Forbes, Robert N. Proctor,, Jay Strader, J. Trevor Mendel, Jean P. Brodie, William E. Harris

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the nearest massive Ultra Compact Dwarf galaxy associated with the Sombrero galaxy, providing insights into its properties, stellar populations, and X-ray emission.
Contribution
It presents the first spectroscopically confirmed massive UCD in a low-density environment and characterizes its physical and stellar properties.
Findings
SUCD1 is the closest massive UCD known.
SUCD1 has a size of 14.7 pc and M_V = -12.3 mag.
SUCD1 shows no evidence of dark matter or non-standard IMF.
Abstract
We report the discovery of an Ultra Compact Dwarf (UCD) associated with the Sombrero galaxy (M104). This is the closest massive UCD known and the first spectroscopically verified massive UCD which is located in a low density environment. The object, we name SUCD1, was identified in HST/ACS imaging and confirmed to be associated with the Sombrero galaxy by its recession velocity obtained from Keck spectra. The light profile is well fitted by a Wilson model. We measure a half light size of 14.7 +/- 1.4 pc, an absolute magnitude of M_V = -12.3 mag (M_K = -15.1 mag) and an internal velocity dispersion of 25.0 +/- 5.6 km/s. Such values are typical of UCDs. From Lick spectral indices we measure a luminosity-weighted central age of 12.6 +/- 0.9 Gyrs, [Fe/H] of -0.08 +/- 0.08 dex and [alpha/Fe] of 0.06 +/- 0.07 dex. The lack of colour gradients suggests these values are representative of the…
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