Tip of the red giant branch distances to the dwarf galaxies dw1335-29 and dw1340-30 in the Centaurus group
Oliver M\"uller, Marina Rejkuba, Helmut Jerjen

TL;DR
This study uses tip of the red giant branch distances to confirm dwarf galaxy membership in the Centaurus group, revealing their properties and spatial distribution, and providing insights into small-scale structure formation.
Contribution
First application of TRGB method to confirm dwarf galaxy membership in the Centaurus group, with detailed analysis of their distances and metallicities.
Findings
Confirmed two dwarf satellites of M83 subgroup at ~5 Mpc.
Derived their metallicities consistent with known relations.
Identified potential planar distribution of satellites around M83.
Abstract
The abundance and spatial distribution of dwarf galaxies are excellent empirical benchmarks to test models of structure formation on small scales. The nearby Centaurus group, with its two subgroups centered on CenA and M83, stands out as an important alternative to the Local Group for scrutinizing cosmological model predictions in a group of galaxies context. We have obtained deep optical images of three recently discovered M83 satellite galaxy candidates with the FORS2 instrument mounted on the Very Large Telescope. We aim to confirm their group membership and study their stellar population. Deep VI-band photometry is used to resolve the brightest stars in our targets. Artificial star tests are performed to estimate the completeness and uncertainties of the photometry. The color-magnitude diagrams reveal the red giant branch (RGB) stars allowing to use the Sobel edge detection method…
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