Metallicity Evolution of the Six Most Luminous M31 Dwarf Satellites
N. Ho, M. Geha, E. Tollerud, R. Zinn, P. Guhathakurta, L. Vargas

TL;DR
This study provides the first spectroscopic metallicity distribution functions for the six most luminous M31 dwarf satellites, revealing their chemical properties, radial metallicity profiles, and comparison with Milky Way counterparts.
Contribution
It offers new spectroscopic MDFs for M31 dwarf satellites, comparing their metallicity properties with Milky Way dwarfs and analyzing radial metallicity gradients.
Findings
M31 satellites follow the same luminosity-metallicity relation as MW dwarfs.
No correlation between metallicity spread and galaxy luminosity.
Radial metallicity gradients are present in only two systems.
Abstract
We present global metallicity properties, metallicity distribution functions (MDFs) and radial metallicity profiles for the six most luminous M31 dwarf galaxy satellites: M32, NGC 205, NGC 185, NGC 147, Andromeda VII, and Andromeda II. The results presented are the first spectroscopic MDFs for dwarf systems surrounding a host galaxy other than the Milky Way. Our sample consists of individual metallicity measurements for 1243 red giant branch (RGB) member stars spread across these six systems. We determine metallicities based on the strength of the Ca II triplet lines using the empirical calibration of Carrera et al.(2013) which is calibrated over the metallicity range -4 < [Fe/H] <+0.5. We find that these M31 satellites lie on the same luminosity-metallicity relationship as the Milky Way dwarf satellites. We do not find a trend between the internal metallicity spread and galaxy…
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