The faint outer regions of the Pegasus Dwarf Irregular galaxy: a much larger and undisturbed galaxy
Alexei Kniazev (1,2), Noah Brosch (3), G. Lyle Hoffman (4), Eva K., Grebel (5), Daniel B. Zucker (6,7,8), Simon A. Pustilnik (9) ((1) SAAO, South, Africa; (2) SALT Foundation, South Africa; (3) The Wise Observatory, Israel;, (4) Lafayette College

TL;DR
This study reveals that the Pegasus Dwarf Irregular galaxy is significantly larger and more extended than previously known, with a complex structure and an older stellar population, based on deep photometry and HI observations.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed extended surface photometry and HI analysis of the Pegasus dwarf, showing it is five times larger and more complex than earlier estimates.
Findings
Galaxy diameter ~8 kpc with Sersic profile
Older stellar population dominates outer regions
HI distribution elongated with a rotation curve showing solid-body rotation
Abstract
We investigate the spatial extent and structure of the Pegasus dwarf irregular galaxy using deep, wide-field, multicolour CCD photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and new deep HI observations. We study an area of ~0.6 square degrees centred on the Pegasus dwarf that was imaged by SDSS. Using effective filtering in colour-magnitude space we reduce the contamination by foreground Galactic field stars and increase significantly the contrast in the outer regions of the Pegasus dwarf. Our extended surface photometry, reaches down to a surface brightness magnitude mu_r~32 mag/sq.arcsec. It reveals a stellar body with a diameter of ~8 kpc that follows a Sersic surface brightness distribution law, which is composed of a significantly older stellar population than that observed in the ~2 kpc main body. The galaxy is at least five times more extended than listed in NED. The faint…
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