Characterizing dw1335-29, a recently discovered dwarf satellite of M83
Andreia Carrillo, Eric Bell, Jeremy Bailin, Antonela Monachesi, Roelof, S. de Jong, Benjamin Harmsen, Colin Slater

TL;DR
This paper confirms dw1335-29 as a dwarf satellite of M83, characterizes its properties, and discusses its irregular shape and possible recent star formation, contributing to understanding dwarf galaxy populations around larger galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first confirmed distance and detailed properties of dw1335-29, a dwarf satellite of M83, and discusses its unusual star formation activity at close proximity.
Findings
dw1335-29 is a satellite of M83 at 26 kpc distance
It has an absolute magnitude of -10.1 and shows signs of recent star formation
The galaxy has an irregular shape and possible young stars
Abstract
The number, distribution, and properties of dwarf satellites are crucial probes of the physics of galaxy formation at low masses and the response of satellite galaxies to the tidal and gas dynamical effects of their more massive parent.To make progress, it is necessary to augment and solidify the census of dwarf satellites of galaxies outside the Local Group. M\"uller et al. (2015) presented 16 dwarf galaxy candidates near M83, but lacking reliable distances, it is unclear which candidates are M83 satellites. Using red giant branch stars from the HST/GHOSTS survey in conjunction with ground-based images from VLT/VIMOS, we confirm that one of the candidates, dw1335-29-- with a projected distance of 26 kpc from M83 and a distance modulus of -- is a satellite of M83. We estimate an absolute magnitude , an ellipticity of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
