A PAndAS view of M31 dwarf elliptical satellites: NGC147 and NGC185
D. Crnojevi\'c (1,2), A. M. N. Ferguson (1), M. J. Irwin (3), A. W., McConnachie (4), E. J. Bernard (1), M. A. Fardal (5), R. A. Ibata (6), G. F., Lewis (3,7), N. F. Martin (6), J. F. Navarro (8), N. E. D. No\"el (9), S., Pasetto (10) ((1) Institute for Astronomy

TL;DR
This study uses PAndAS data to analyze the extended structures of M31's dwarf ellipticals NGC147 and NGC185, revealing their larger sizes, shapes, and metallicity gradients, with evidence of tidal interactions affecting NGC147.
Contribution
It provides detailed surface brightness profiles, revised galaxy parameters, and insights into the tidal influences on these dwarf ellipticals, which were previously less understood.
Findings
NGC147 has a larger effective radius and exhibits tidal tails.
NGC185 maintains a regular shape with a metallicity gradient.
Both galaxies have larger effective radii than previously reported.
Abstract
We exploit data from the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS) to study the extended structures of M31's dwarf elliptical companions, NGC147 and NGC185. Our wide-field, homogeneous photometry allows to construct deep colour-magnitude diagrams (CMDs) which reach down to mag below the red giant branch (RGB) tip. We trace the stellar components of the galaxies to surface brightness of mag arcsec and show they have much larger extents ( kpc radii) than previously recognised. While NGC185 retains a regular shape in its peripheral regions, NGC147 exhibits pronounced isophotal twisting due to the emergence of symmetric tidal tails. We fit single Sersic models to composite surface brightness profiles constructed from diffuse light and star counts and find that NGC147 has an effective radius almost 3 times that of NGC185. In both cases, the effective…
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