Discovery of an ultra-diffuse galaxy in the Pisces-Perseus supercluster
David Martinez-Delgado, Ronald Laesker, Margarita Sharina, Elisa, Toloba, Jurgen Fliri, Rachael Beaton, David Valls-Gabaud, Igor D., Karachentsev, Taylor S. Chonis, Eva K. Grebel, Duncan A. Forbes, Aaron J., Romanowsky, J. Gallego-Laborda, Karel Teuwen, M. A. Gomez-Flechoso

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of DGSAT I, an ultra-diffuse galaxy in the Pisces-Perseus supercluster, highlighting its properties, background, and implications for understanding ultra-diffuse galaxy formation in different environments.
Contribution
It presents the first discovery of an ultra-diffuse galaxy in the Pisces-Perseus supercluster, expanding knowledge of these galaxies beyond dense clusters.
Findings
DGSAT I is an ultra-diffuse, quenched galaxy with low surface brightness.
It is associated with the Pisces-Perseus supercluster at ~78 Mpc.
Its properties resemble ultra-diffuse galaxies in the Coma cluster.
Abstract
We report the discovery of DGSAT I, an ultra-diffuse, quenched galaxy located 10.4 degrees in projection from the Andromeda galaxy (M31). This low-surface brightness galaxy (mu_V = 24.8 mag/arcsec), found with a small amateur telescope, appears unresolved in sub-arcsecond archival Subaru/Suprime-Cam images, and hence has been missed by optical surveys relying on resolved star counts, in spite of its relatively large effective radius (R_e(V) = 12 arcsec) and proximity (15 arcmin) to the well-known dwarf spheroidal galaxy And II. Its red color (V-I = 1.0), shallow Sersic index (n_V=0.68), and the absence of detectable H-alpha emission are typical properties of dwarf spheroidal galaxies and suggest that it is mainly composed of old stars. Initially interpreted as an interesting case of an isolated dwarf spheroidal galaxy in the local universe, our radial velocity measurement obtained…
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