Two Ultra-Faint Milky Way Stellar Systems Discovered in Early Data from the DECam Local Volume Exploration Survey
S. Mau, W. Cerny, A. B. Pace, Y. Choi, A. Drlica-Wagner, L., Santana-Silva, A. H. Riley, D. Erkal, G. S. Stringfellow, M. Adam\'ow, J. L., Carlin, R. A. Gruendl, D. Hernandez-Lang, N. Kuropatkin, T. S. Li, C. E., Mart\'inez-V\'azquez, E. Morganson, B. Mutlu-Pakdil, E. H. Neilsen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of two ultra-faint stellar systems in the Milky Way using early data from the DELVE survey, characterizing their properties and assessing their origins.
Contribution
The study presents the first detailed characterization of two ultra-faint stellar systems discovered in DELVE data, including their distances, sizes, ages, metallicities, and motions, and evaluates their possible association with the LMC.
Findings
Centaurus I is a likely ultra-faint dwarf galaxy with a distinct proper motion.
DELVE 1 is a faint halo star cluster with marginal proper motion detection.
Neither system appears to be associated with the Large Magellanic Cloud.
Abstract
We report the discovery of two ultra-faint stellar systems found in early data from the DECam Local Volume Exploration survey (DELVE). The first system, Centaurus I (DELVE J1238-4054), is identified as a resolved overdensity of old and metal-poor stars with a heliocentric distance of kpc, a half-light radius of arcmin, an age of Gyr, a metallicity of , and an absolute magnitude of mag. This characterization is consistent with the population of ultra-faint satellites, and confirmation of this system would make Centaurus I one of the brightest recently discovered ultra-faint dwarf galaxies. Centaurus I is detected in Gaia DR2 with a clear and distinct proper motion signal, confirming that it is a real association of stars distinct from the Milky…
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