PAndAS' progeny: extending the M31 dwarf galaxy cabal
Jenny C. Richardson, Mike Irwin, Alan W. McConnachie, Nicolas F., Martin, Aaron Dotter, Annette M. N. Ferguson, Rodrigo A. Ibata, Scott, Chapman, Geraint F. Lewis, Nial R. Tanvir, R. Michael Rich

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of five new dwarf galaxies around M31 using the PAndAS survey, expanding our understanding of satellite distribution and galaxy assembly processes.
Contribution
The discovery of five new M31 dwarf galaxies extends the known satellite population and provides insights into their spatial distribution and properties, challenging existing cosmological models.
Findings
Five new dwarf galaxies discovered around M31.
Satellite surface density is constant out to 150 kpc.
Radial density distribution of satellites follows 1/r, conflicting with some models.
Abstract
We present the discovery of five new dwarf galaxies, Andromeda XXIII-XXVII, located in the outer halo of M31. These galaxies were found in the second year of data from the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS) of the M31/M33 subgroup. This survey now provides an almost complete panoramic view of the M31 halo out to an average projected radius of ~150 kpc. The metal-poor stellar density map for this whole region serves, not only as an illustration of the discovery space for satellite galaxies, but also gives a birds-eye view of the ongoing assembly process of an L* disk galaxy. Four of the new dwarfs appear as well-defined spatial over-densities of stars lying on the expected locus of metal-poor red giant branch stars at the distance of M31. The fifth over-density, And XXVII, is embedded in an extensive stream of such stars and is possibly the remnant of a strong tidal disruption…
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