Discovery of a stellar tidal stream around the Whale galaxy, NGC 4631
David Martinez-Delgado (ARI, Heidelberg), Elena D'Onghia (Univ., Wisconsin), Taylor S. Chonis (Univ. Texas, Austin), Rachael L. Beaton (OCI,, Pasadena), Karel Teuwen (ROSA Observatory), R. Jay GaBany (Black Bird, Observatory II), Eva K. Grebel (ARI, Heidelberg)

TL;DR
A giant stellar tidal stream was discovered around NGC 4631, revealing insights into galaxy interactions and satellite accretion through deep imaging and N-body modeling.
Contribution
This paper presents the first detection and detailed analysis of a stellar tidal stream around NGC 4631, supported by observational data and N-body simulations.
Findings
The stream extends over 85 kpc with a clear colour gradient.
The stream likely originates from a satellite galaxy, not the recent gas-rich interaction.
The structure may contain the progenitor dwarf galaxy and aligns with faint dwarf spheroidals.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a giant stellar tidal stream in the halo of NGC 4631, a nearby edge-on spiral galaxy interacting with the spiral NGC 4656, in deep images taken with a 40-cm aperture robotic telescope. The stream has two components: a bridge-like feature extended between NGC 4631 and NGC 4656 (stream_SE) and an overdensity with extended features on the opposite side of the NGC 4631 disk (stream_NW). Together, these features extend more than 85 kpc and display a clear (g-r) colour gradient. The orientation of stream_SE relative to the orientations of NGC 4631 and NGC 4656 is not consistent with an origin from interaction between these two spirals, and is more likely debris from a satellite encounter. The stellar tidal features can be qualitatively reproduced in an N-body model of the tidal disruption of a single, massive dwarf satellite on a moderately eccentric orbit (e=0.6)…
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