PAndAS' cubs: discovery of two new dwarf galaxies in the surroundings of the Andromeda and Triangulum galaxies
Nicolas F. Martin, Alan W. McConnachie, Mike Irwin, Lawrence M., Widrow, Annette M. N. Ferguson, Rodrigo A. Ibata, John Dubinski, Arif Babul,, Scott Chapman, Mark Fardal, Geraint F. Lewis, Julio Navarro, R. Michael Rich

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two new dwarf galaxies, Andromeda XXI and XXII, around M31 and M33, expanding our understanding of satellite galaxy populations in the Local Group through analysis of survey data.
Contribution
The paper introduces the first discoveries of dwarf galaxies in the M31/M33 group from the PAndAS survey, highlighting their properties and potential implications for galaxy formation.
Findings
Andromeda XXI is a large, bright dwarf galaxy with low surface brightness.
Andromeda XXII is a faint galaxy possibly orbiting M33.
These discoveries increase the known dwarf spheroidal count in the region to 20.
Abstract
We present the discovery of two new dwarf galaxies, Andromeda XXI and Andromeda XXII, located in the surroundings of the Andromeda and Triangulum galaxies (M31 and M33). These discoveries stem from the first year data of the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS), a photometric survey of the M31/M33 group conducted with the Megaprime/MegaCam wide-field camera mounted on the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Both satellites appear as spatial overdensities of stars which, when plotted in a color-magnitude diagram, follow metal-poor, [Fe/H]=-1.8, red giant branches at the distance of M31/M33. Andromeda XXI is a moderately bright dwarf galaxy (M_V=-9.9+/-0.6), albeit with low surface brightness, emphasizing again that many relatively luminous M31 satellites still remain to be discovered. It is also a large satellite, with a half-light radius close to 1 kpc, making it the fourth largest…
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