Probing the boundary between star clusters and dwarf galaxies: A MUSE view on the dynamics of Crater/Laevens I
Karina Voggel, Michael Hilker, Holger Baumgardt, Michelle L.M., Collins, Eva K. Grebel, Bernd Husemann, Tom Richtler, Matthias J. Frank

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE observations to analyze Crater, confirming member stars, measuring its velocity and mass, and concluding it is a globular cluster rather than a dwarf galaxy due to its stellar population and lack of dark matter evidence.
Contribution
The paper provides new spectroscopic data that increases confirmed members of Crater and clarifies its nature as a globular cluster through detailed dynamical analysis.
Findings
Crater has a systemic velocity of 148.18 km/s.
Velocity dispersion is approximately 2 km/s.
Results support Crater being a globular cluster, not a dwarf galaxy.
Abstract
We present MUSE observations of the debated ultra faint stellar system Crater. We spectroscopically confirm 26 member stars of this system via radial velocity measurements. We derive the systematic instrumental velocity uncertainty of MUSE spectra to be 2.27. This new dataset increases the confirmed member stars of Crater by a factor of 3. One out of three bright blue stars and a fainter blue star just above the main-sequence-turn-off are also found to be likely members of the system. The observations reveal that Crater has a systemic radial velocity of , whereas the most likely velocity dispersion of this system is . The total dynamical mass of the system, assuming dynamical equilibrium is then $M_{\rm tot}=1.50^{+4.9}_{-1.2}\cdot 10^{\rm…
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