Internal Stellar Kinematics of M32 from the SPLASH Survey: Dark Halo Constraints and the Formation of Compact Elliptical Galaxies
Kirsten Howley, Puragra Guhathakurta, Roeland van der Marel, Marla, Geha, Jason Kalirai, Basilio Yniguez, Evan Kirby, Jean-Charles Cuillandre and, Karoline Gilbert

TL;DR
This study presents the first resolved-star kinematic analysis of M32, revealing regular stellar motions and suggesting the presence of an extended dark halo, which challenges the significance of tidal stripping in compact elliptical galaxy formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed kinematic profile of M32 using combined spectroscopy and models its dynamics, highlighting the potential role of dark matter over tidal effects.
Findings
M32's kinematics are regular and symmetric.
An extended dark halo is likely present.
Tidal effects may be less significant in cE formation.
Abstract
As part of the SPLASH survey of the Andromeda galaxy (M31) and its neighbors, we have obtained Keck/DEIMOS spectra of the compact elliptical (cE) satellite M32. This is the first resolved-star kinematical study of any cE galaxy. In contrast to previous studies that extended out to r<30"~1Re~100pc, we measure the rotation curve and velocity dispersion profile out to r~250" and higher order Gauss-Hermite moments out to r~70". We achieve this by combining integrated-light spectroscopy at small radii (where crowding/blending are severe) with resolved stellar spectroscopy at larger radii, using spatial and kinematical information to statistically account for M31 contamination. The rotation curve and velocity dispersion profile extend well beyond the radius (r~150") where the isophotes are distorted. Unlike NGC 205, another close dwarf companion of M31, M32's kinematic are regular and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
