A stellar over-density associated with the Small Magellanic Cloud
A. Pieres, B. X. Santiago, A. Drlica-Wagner, K. Bechtol, R. P. van der, Marel, G. Besla, N. F. Martin, V. Belokurov, C. Gallart, D. Martinez-Delgado,, J. Marshall, N. E. D. Noel, S. R. Majewski, M.-R. L. Cioni, T. S. Li, W., Hartley, E. Luque, B. C. Conn, A. R. Walker

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a stellar over-density near the Small Magellanic Cloud, likely resulting from tidal interactions, with detailed characterization of its properties and possible origins.
Contribution
The study identifies and characterizes a new stellar over-density associated with the SMC, providing insights into its properties and potential formation scenarios.
Findings
SMCNOD is composed mainly of intermediate-age stars.
SMCNOD has an elongated shape with high ellipticity.
The over-density likely resulted from tidal stripping from the SMC.
Abstract
We report the discovery of a stellar over-density 8 north of the center of the Small Magellanic Cloud (Small Magellanic Cloud Northern Over-Density; SMCNOD) using data from the first two years of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and the first year of the MAGellanic SatelLITEs Survey (MagLiteS). The SMCNOD is indistinguishable in age, metallicity and distance from the nearby SMC stars, being primarly composed of intermediate-age stars (6 Gyr, Z=0.001), with a small fraction of young stars (1 Gyr, Z=0.01). The SMCNOD has an elongated shape with an ellipticity of 0.6 and a size of 6x2 deg. It has an absolute magnitude of -7.7, kpc, and = 31.2 mag arcsec. We estimate a stellar mass of , following a Kroupa mass function. The SMCNOD was probably removed from the SMC disk by tidal stripping, since it is located…
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