Farthest Neighbor: The Distant Milky Way Satellite Eridanus II
T. S. Li, J. D. Simon, A. Drlica-Wagner, K. Bechtol, M. Y. Wang, J., Garc\'ia-Bellido, J. Frieman, J. L. Marshall, D. J. James, L. Strigari, A. B., Pace, E. Balbinot, Y. Zhang, T. M. C. Abbott, S. Allam, A. Benoit-L\'evy, G., M. Bernstein, E. Bertin, D. Brooks, D. L. Burke

TL;DR
This study provides detailed spectroscopic analysis of the distant Milky Way satellite Eridanus II, confirming its dark matter dominance, metallicity, and orbital status, and discusses implications for galaxy evolution and dark matter constraints.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic study of Eridanus II, revealing its dark matter content, metallicity, and orbital dynamics, and exploring implications for galaxy formation and dark matter models.
Findings
Eri II is dark matter-dominated with a high mass-to-light ratio.
Eri II is one of the most distant known Milky Way satellites.
No evidence of recent star formation or gas in Eri II.
Abstract
We present Magellan/IMACS spectroscopy of the recently-discovered Milky Way satellite Eridanus II (Eri II). We identify 28 member stars in Eri II, from which we measure a systemic radial velocity of and a velocity dispersion of . Assuming that Eri~II is a dispersion-supported system in dynamical equilibrium, we derive a mass within the half-light radius of Eri II is , indicating a mass-to-light ratio of and confirming that it is a dark matter-dominated dwarf galaxy. From the equivalent width measurements of the CaT lines of 16 red giant member stars, we derive a mean metallicity of and a metallicity dispersion of $\sigma_{\rm…
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