Exploring Halo Substructure with Giant Stars: The Nature of the Triangulum-Andromeda Stellar Features
Allyson Sheffield, Kathryn Johnston, Steven Majewski, Guillermo Damke,, Whitney Richardson, Rachael Beaton, Helio Rocha-Pinto

TL;DR
This study uses photometric and spectroscopic data of M giants to analyze the Triangulum-Andromeda stellar features, revealing two distinct populations with different ages and distances, likely originating from a single disrupted dwarf galaxy.
Contribution
It provides a detailed characterization of the TriAnd substructures, identifying two distinct stellar populations and proposing a common origin from a disrupted dwarf galaxy.
Findings
Two distinct M giant sequences, TriAnd1 and TriAnd2, are identified.
TriAnd1 is younger (6-10 Gyr) and closer (~15-21 kpc), while TriAnd2 is older (10-12 Gyr) and farther (~24-32 kpc).
Differences explained by two pericentric passages of the same dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
As large-scale stellar surveys have become available over the past decade, the ability to detect and characterize substructures in the Galaxy has increased dramatically. These surveys have revealed the Triangulum-Andromeda (TriAnd) region to be rich with substructure in the distance range 20-30 kpc, and the relation of these features to each other -- if any -- remains unclear. This complex situation motivates this re-examination of the TriAnd region with a photometric and spectroscopic survey of M giants. An exploration using 2MASS photometry reveals not only the faint sequence in M giants detected by Rocha-Pinto et al. (2004) spanning the range and but, in addition, a second, brighter and more densely populated M giant sequence. These two sequences are likely associated with the two distinct main-sequences discovered (and labeled…
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