ALMA detection of the dusty object silhouetted against the S0 galaxy NGC 3269 in the Antlia cluster
L. K. Haikala (1), R. Salinas (2), T. Richtler (3), M. G\'omez (4), G., F. Gahm (5), and K. Mattila (6) ((1) Instituto de Astronomia y Ciencias, Planetarias de Atacama, Universidad de Atacama, Copiapo, Chile, (2) Gemini, Observatory/NSF's NOIRLab, La Serena, Chile

TL;DR
This study used ALMA and other telescopes to confirm that a dust patch silhouetted against galaxy NGC 3269 is extragalactic, revealing its properties and suggesting it may be a remnant of galactic interaction.
Contribution
First detection of an extragalactic dust complex in NGC 3269 using ALMA, providing detailed measurements of its velocity, size, and dust properties.
Findings
The dust patch is confirmed extragalactic with a heliocentric velocity of 3878 km/s.
The dust complex has a linear size of about 1 kpc and a dust mass of approximately 2.6x10^4 solar masses.
The extinction curve differs from the Milky Way, indicating different dust properties.
Abstract
An intriguing silhouette of a small dust patch can be seen against the disk of the S0 galaxy NGC 3269 in the Antlia cluster in optical images. The images do not provide any clue as to whether the patch is a local Jupiter mass-scale cloudlet or a large extragalactic dust complex. We aim to resolve the nature of this object: is it a small Galactic cloudlet or an extragalactic dust complex? ALMA and APEX spectroscopy and Gemini GMOS long-slit spectroscopy were used to measure the velocity of the patch and the NGC 3269 disk radial velocity curve. A weak 162.5 km/s wide CO (2-1) T 192.5 mK line in a 2.0" by 2.12" beam associated with the object was detected with ALMA. The observed heliocentric velocity, V,hel = 38785.0km/s, immediately establishes the extragalactic nature of the object. The patch velocity is consistent with the velocity of the nucleus of NGC…
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