The photometric properties of a vast stellar substructure in the outskirts of M33
Alan W. McConnachie, Annette M. N. Ferguson, Michael J. Irwin, John, Dubinski, Lawrence M. Widrow, Aaron Dotter, Rodrigo Ibata, Geraint F. Lewis

TL;DR
This study maps and analyzes a large, low-surface brightness stellar substructure surrounding M33, revealing its properties, extent, and possible origin, suggesting it results from tidal disruption in M31's gravitational influence.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of the stellar populations and structure of M33's extensive stellar substructure using deep photometric data.
Findings
The substructure has an old, metal-poor stellar population.
It extends up to 40 kpc from M33's center.
The structure's morphology suggests a tidal origin.
Abstract
We have surveyed sq.degrees surrounding M33 with CFHT MegaCam in the g and i filters, as part of the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey. Our observations are deep enough to resolve the top 4mags of the red giant branch population in this galaxy. We have previously shown that the disk of M33 is surrounded by a large, irregular, low-surface brightness substructure. Here, we quantify the stellar populations and structure of this feature using the PAndAS data. We show that the stellar populations of this feature are consistent with an old population with dex and an interquartile range in metallicity of dex. We construct a surface brightness map of M33 that traces this feature to mags\,arcsec. At these low surface brightness levels, the structure extends to projected radii of kpc from the center of M33 in both the north-west…
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