A tale of two tails and an off-centered envelope: diffuse light around the cD galaxy NGC 3311 in the Hydra I cluster
Magda Arnaboldi (ESO, Garching, INAF, OATo), Giulia Ventimiglia, (ESO, Garching, MPE), Enrica Iodice (INAF, OAC), Ortwin Gerhard (MPE),, Lodovico Coccato (ESO, Garching, MPE)

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex diffuse light structures around the cD galaxy NGC 3311 in Hydra I, revealing off-centered envelopes, tidal streams, and accreted stars, shedding light on galaxy evolution in clusters.
Contribution
It provides detailed photometric and spectroscopic analysis of NGC 3311's extended halo and tidal features, identifying new tidal streams and the origins of off-centered structures.
Findings
Discovery of an off-centered envelope containing high-velocity accreted stars.
Identification of two tidal streams from dwarf galaxy HCC 026 and galaxy HCC 007.
Evidence of ongoing galaxy disruption and complex light distribution around NGC 3311.
Abstract
The formation of intracluster light and of the extended halos around brightest cluster galaxies is closely related to morphological transformation, tidal stripping, and disruption of galaxies in clusters. We analyze Ks- and V-band surface photometry as well as deep long-slit spectra, and establish a link between the structures in the light distribution, the absorption line kinematics, and the LOS velocity distributions of nearby galaxies and planetary nebulae (PNs). The central galaxy NGC 3311 is surrounded by an extended symmetric outer halo with n=10 and an additional, off-centered envelope ~ 50" to the North-East. Its luminosity L_V= 1.2x10^{10} +/- 6.0 x 10^8 L_sun corresponds to ~50 % of the luminosity of the symmetric halo in the same region. Based on measured PN velocities, at least part of the off-centered envelope consists of high-velocity accreted stars. We have also…
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