A Petal of the Sunflower: Photometry of the Stellar Tidal Stream in the Halo of Messier 63 (NGC 5055)
Taylor S. Chonis, David Martinez-Delgado, R. Jay Gabany, Steven R., Majewski, Gary J. Hill, Ray Gralak, Ignacio Trujillo

TL;DR
This study presents deep photometric observations of a faint stellar stream in the halo of galaxy M63, providing evidence of a recent minor merger with a dwarf galaxy, and discusses associated tidal features and galaxy structure.
Contribution
First detailed photometric analysis confirming a stellar tidal stream in M63 using small telescopes, revealing merger history and complex halo features.
Findings
Detected a ~29 kpc long stellar stream from a dwarf satellite.
Identified additional low surface brightness plumes and tidal debris.
Linked the galaxy's warped HI disk to ongoing minor merger activity.
Abstract
We present surface photometry of a very faint, giant arc feature in the halo of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 5055 (M63) that is consistent with being a part of a stellar stream resulting from the disruption of a dwarf satellite galaxy. This faint feature was first detected in early photographic studies by van der Kruit (1979); more recently by Mart\'inez-Delgado et al. (2010) and as presented in this work, the loop has been realized to be the result of a recent minor merger through evidence obtained by deep images taken with a telescope of only 0.16 m aperture. The stellar stream is confirmed in additional images taken with the 0.5 m of the BlackBird Remote Observatory and the 0.8 m of the McDonald Observatory. This low surface brightness structure around the disk of the galaxy extends ~29 kpc from its center, with a projected width of 3.3 kpc. The stream's morphology is consistent with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
