A Complete Spectroscopic Survey of the Milky Way Satellite Segue 1: The Darkest Galaxy
Joshua D. Simon (Carnegie Observatories), Marla Geha (Yale), Quinn E., Minor, Gregory D. Martinez (UC Irvine), Evan N. Kirby (Caltech), James S., Bullock, Manoj Kaplinghat (UC Irvine), Louis E. Strigari (Stanford), Beth, Willman (Haverford), Philip I. Choi (Pomona)

TL;DR
This comprehensive spectroscopic study confirms Segue 1 as the darkest known galaxy with an extremely high dark matter density, providing crucial insights into dark matter physics and galaxy formation.
Contribution
We provide the first detailed kinematic and metallicity analysis of Segue 1, establishing it as a dark matter-dominated dwarf galaxy with no tidal disruption evidence.
Findings
Segue 1 has a velocity dispersion of 3.7 km/s.
Mass within half-light radius is approximately 5.8 x 10^5 solar masses.
Mass-to-light ratio is about 3400, indicating extreme dark matter dominance.
Abstract
We present the results of a comprehensive Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopic survey of the ultra-faint Milky Way satellite galaxy Segue 1. We have obtained velocity measurements for 98.2% of the stars within 67 pc (10 arcmin, or 2.3 half-light radii) of the center of Segue 1 that have colors and magnitudes consistent with membership, down to a magnitude limit of r=21.7. Based on photometric, kinematic, and metallicity information, we identify 71 stars as probable Segue 1 members, including some as far out as 87 pc. After correcting for the influence of binary stars using repeated velocity measurements, we determine a velocity dispersion of 3.7^{+1.4}_{-1.1} km/s, with a corresponding mass within the half-light radius of 5.8^{+8.2}_{-3.1} x 10^5 Msun. The stellar kinematics of Segue 1 require very high mass-to-light ratios unless the system is far from dynamical equilibrium, even if the period…
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