Dynamical evidence for a strong tidal interaction between the Milky Way and its satellite, Leo V
Michelle L. M. Collins, Erik J. Tollerud, David J. Sand, Ana Bonaca,, Beth Willman, Jay Strader

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemodynamical properties of Leo V dwarf galaxy, revealing signs of tidal interaction with the Milky Way and suggesting it is near dissolution due to past gravitational encounters.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed chemodynamical analysis of Leo V, including velocity, metallicity, and evidence for tidal effects, indicating its recent interaction with the Milky Way.
Findings
Leo V has a systemic velocity of ~171 km/s.
Detected a significant velocity gradient pointing toward the Galactic center.
Evidence suggests Leo V is near dissolution due to tidal interactions.
Abstract
We present a chemodynamical analysis of the Leo~V dwarf galaxy, based on Keck II DEIMOS spectra of 8 member stars. We find a systemic velocity for the system of kms, and barely resolve a velocity dispersion for the system, with kms, consistent with previous studies of Leo~V. The poorly resolved dispersion means we are unable to adequately constrain the dark matter content of Leo~V. We find an average metallicity for the dwarf of [Fe/H], and measure a significant spread in the iron abundance of its member stars, with [Fe/H] dex, which cleanly identifies Leo~V as a dwarf galaxy that has been able to self-enrich its stellar population through extended star formation. Owing to the tentative photometric evidence for tidal substructure around Leo~V, we also investigate…
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