Triangulum II: a very metal-poor and dynamically hot stellar system
Nicolas F. Martin, Rodrigo A. Ibata, Michelle L. M. Collins, R., Michael Rich, Eric F. Bell, Annette M. N. Ferguson, Benjamin P. M. Laevens,, Hans-Walter Rix, Scott C. Chapman, Andreas Koch

TL;DR
Triangulum II is a very metal-poor, dynamically complex stellar system likely representing a disrupting dwarf galaxy or embedded in a stellar stream, based on spectroscopic observations of its member stars.
Contribution
This study provides the first spectroscopic analysis of Triangulum II, revealing its extreme metallicity and complex internal kinematics, suggesting a disrupted dwarf galaxy or stellar stream.
Findings
Triangulum II has a very negative radial velocity confirming it as a Milky Way satellite.
The velocity dispersion increases outward, indicating complex internal dynamics.
The system is among the most metal-poor Milky Way dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We present a study of the recently discovered compact stellar system Triangulum II. From observations conducted with the DEIMOS spectrograph on Keck II, we obtained spectra for 13 member stars that follow the CMD features of this very faint stellar system and include two bright red giant branch stars. Tri II has a very negative radial velocity (<v_r>=-383.7^{+3.0}_{-3.3} km/s) that translates to <v_{r,gsr}> ~ -264 km/s and confirms it is a Milky Way satellite. We show that, despite the small data set, there is evidence that Tri II has complex internal kinematics. Its radial velocity dispersion increases from 4.4^{+2.8}_{-2.0} km/s in the central 2' to 14.1^{+5.8}_{-4.2} km/s outwards. The velocity dispersion of the full sample is inferred to be \sigma_{vr}=9.9^{+3.2}_{-2.2} km/s. From the two bright RGB member stars we measure an average metallicity <[Fe/H]>=-2.6+/-0.2, placing Tri II…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
