Prolate rotation and metallicity gradient in the transforming dwarf galaxy Phoenix
Nikolay Kacharov, Giuseppina Battaglia, Marina Rejkuba, Andrew A., Cole, Ricardo Carrera, Filippo Fraternali, Mark I. Wilkinson, Carme G., Gallart, Mike Irwin, and Eline Tolstoy

TL;DR
This study reveals prolate rotation and a metallicity gradient in the Phoenix dwarf galaxy, providing insights into its evolutionary processes and internal kinematics through a comprehensive spectroscopic survey of its stars.
Contribution
First wide-area spectroscopic survey of Phoenix revealing its internal kinematics and metallicity gradient, highlighting features linked to its transformation process.
Findings
Detection of prolate rotation aligned with young star distribution
Measurement of a metallicity gradient of -0.13 dex per arcmin
Discovery of an extremely metal-poor star candidate
Abstract
Transition type dwarf galaxies are thought to be systems undergoing the process of transformation from a star-forming into a passively evolving dwarf, which makes them particularly suitable to study evolutionary processes driving the existence of different dwarf morphological types. Here we present results from a spectroscopic survey of ~200 individual red giant branch stars in the Phoenix dwarf, the closest transition type with a comparable luminosity to "classical" dwarf galaxies. We measure a systemic heliocentric velocity V = -21.2 km/s. Our survey reveals the clear presence of prolate rotation, which is aligned with the peculiar spatial distribution of the youngest stars in Phoenix. We speculate that both features might have arisen from the same event, possibly an accretion of a smaller system. The evolved stellar population of Phoenix is relatively metal-poor (<[Fe/H]> =…
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