The extended halo of Centaurus A: uncovering satellites, streams, and substructures
D. Crnojevi\'c (1), D. J. Sand (1), K. Spekkens (2), N. Caldwell (3),, P. Guhathakurta (4), B. McLeod (3), A. Seth (5), J. Simon (6), J. Strader, (7), E. Toloba (1,4) ((1) Department of Physics, Texas Tech University,, Lubbock, TX, USA, (2) Department of Physics

TL;DR
This study provides the most extensive resolved stellar map of Centaurus A, revealing numerous new streams, shells, and dwarf satellites, and offers insights into its complex accretion history and satellite population.
Contribution
It presents the first wide-field resolved stellar map of Centaurus A, discovering new substructures and dwarf satellites, including the first tidally disrupting dwarf around Cen A.
Findings
Discovered 13 new dwarf satellite candidates.
Identified multiple streams and shells indicating active accretion.
Found a tidally disrupting dwarf galaxy, CenA-MM-Dw3.
Abstract
We present the widest-field resolved stellar map to date of the closest ( Mpc) massive elliptical galaxy NGC 5128 (Centaurus A; Cen A), extending out to a projected galactocentric radius of kpc. The dataset is part of our ongoing Panoramic Imaging Survey of Centaurus and Sculptor (PISCeS) utilizing the Magellan/Megacam imager. We resolve a population of old red giant branch stars down to mag below the tip of the red giant branch, reaching surface brightness limits as low as mag arcsec. The resulting spatial stellar density map highlights a plethora of previously unknown streams, shells, and satellites, including the first tidally disrupting dwarf around Cen A (CenA-MM-Dw3), which underline its active accretion history. We report 13 previously unknown dwarf satellite candidates, of which 9 are confirmed to be at the distance of Cen A…
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