Triangulum II: Possibly a Very Dense Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxy
Evan N. Kirby (1), Judith G. Cohen (1), Joshua D. Simon (2), Puragra, Guhathakurta (3) ((1) Caltech, (2) Carnegie Observatories, (3) UC Santa Cruz)

TL;DR
Triangulum II is a newly identified ultra-faint dwarf galaxy with extremely high density and mass-to-light ratio, making it a prime candidate for dark matter studies, despite potential tidal disruption.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed kinematic and metallicity measurements of Triangulum II, establishing it as a dark matter-dominated galaxy with an exceptionally high density.
Findings
Velocity dispersion of 5.1 km/s suggests dark matter dominance.
Mass-to-light ratio estimated at around 3600, the highest among non-disrupting galaxies.
Density within half-light radius exceeds that of similar faint galaxies.
Abstract
Laevens et al. recently discovered Triangulum II, a satellite of the Milky Way. Its Galactocentric distance is 36 kpc, and its luminosity is only 450 L_sun. Using Keck/DEIMOS, we measured the radial velocities of six member stars within 1.2' of the center of Triangulum II, and we found a velocity dispersion of sigma_v = 5.1 -1.4 +4.0 km/s. We also measured the metallicities of three stars and found a range of 0.8 dex in [Fe/H]. The velocity and metallicity dispersions identify Triangulum II as a dark matter-dominated galaxy. The galaxy is moving very quickly toward the Galactic center (v_GSR = -262 km/s). Although it might be in the process of being tidally disrupted as it approaches pericenter, there is no strong evidence for disruption in our data set. The ellipticity is low, and the mean velocity, <v_helio> = -382.1 +/- 2.9 km/s, rules out an association with the Triangulum-Andromeda…
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