Galaxy populations in the Antlia cluster - III. Properties of faint early-type galaxies
Analia V. Smith Castelli (IALP-FCAG, CONICET, Argentina), Sergio A., Cellone (IALP-FCAG, CONICET, Argentina), Favio R. Faifer (IALP-FCAG, CONICET,, Argentina), Lilia P. Bassino (IALP-FCAG, CONICET, Argentina), Tom Richtler, (Universidad de Concepcion, Chile)

TL;DR
This study analyzes faint early-type galaxies in the Antlia cluster, confirming new members, including dwarf and compact ellipticals, and extends the color-magnitude relation to fainter magnitudes, providing insights into their properties and distribution.
Contribution
It presents new spectroscopic confirmation of faint galaxy members, extends the color-magnitude relation to lower luminosities, and analyzes the properties and spatial distribution of faint early-type galaxies in Antlia.
Findings
Confirmed 22 early-type galaxy members, including 2 cE types.
Extended the CMR to 4 mag fainter, over 10 mag in total.
Identified two galaxy groups in Antlia with distinct properties.
Abstract
(Abridge) We present a new analysis of the early-type galaxy population in the central region of the Antlia cluster, focusing on the faint systems like dwarf ellipticals (dE) and dwarf spheroidals (dSph). We confirm 22 early-type galaxies as Antlia members, using GEMINI-GMOS and MAGELLAN-MIKE spectra. Among them, 2 belong to the rare type of compact ellipticals (cE), and 5 are new faint dwarfs that had never been catalogued before. In addition, we present 16 newly identified low surface brightness galaxy candidates, almost half of them displaying morphologies consistent with being Antlia's counterparts of Local Group dSphs, that extend the faint luminosity limit of our study down to MB = -10.1 (BT = 22.6) mag. We built an improved CMR in the Washington photometric system, i.e. integrated T1 magnitudes versus (C - T1) colours, which extends \sim 4 mag faintwards the limit of…
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