A MegaCam Survey of Outer Halo Satellites. III. Photometric and Structural Parameters
Ricardo R. Munoz, Patrick Cote, Felipe A. Santana, Marla Geha, Joshua, D. Simon, Grecco A. Oyarzun, Peter B. Stetson, S. G. Djorgovski

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive, uniform analysis of 58 outer halo Milky Way satellites, measuring their photometric and structural parameters to better understand their properties and distribution.
Contribution
It presents the largest and most uniform set of structural parameters for outer halo satellites, using a maximum-likelihood approach to fit multiple density models across a broad sample.
Findings
Outer halo satellites show a wide range of sizes, luminosities, and surface brightnesses.
No clear separation between star clusters and galaxies at faint luminosities.
The survey covers roughly 72% of known outer halo satellites.
Abstract
We present structural parameters from a wide-field homogeneous imaging survey of Milky Way satellites carried out with the MegaCam imagers on the 3.6m Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) and 6.5m Magellan-Clay telescope. Our survey targets an unbiased sample of "outer halo" satellites (i.e., substructures having Galactocentric distances greater than 25 kpc) and includes classical dSph galaxies, ultra-faint dwarfs, and remote globular clusters. We combine deep, panoramic imaging for 44 satellites and archival imaging for 14 additional objects (primarily obtained with the DECam instrument as part of the Dark Energy Survey), to measure photometric and structural parameters for 58 outer halo satellites. This is the largest and most uniform analysis of Milky Way satellites undertaken to date and represents roughly three quarters (72\%) of all known outer halo…
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