The survey of planetary nebulae in Andromeda (M31) III. Constraints from deep planetary nebula luminosity functions on the origin of the inner halo substructures in M31
Souradeep Bhattacharya, Magda Arnaboldi, Ortwin Gerhard, Alan, McConnachie, Nelson Caldwell, Johanna Hartke, Kenneth C. Freeman

TL;DR
This study uses deep planetary nebula luminosity functions in M31 to investigate the origins of inner halo substructures, revealing their stellar population properties and linking them to past merger events.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed PNLF analysis of multiple M31 substructures, constraining their origins and stellar populations in relation to galaxy merger history.
Findings
Giant Stream and NE-shelf are consistent with being stellar debris from an infalling satellite.
G1 Clump is linked with the pre-merger disc of M31.
Stream-D has an unrelated, distinct origin.
Abstract
The Andromeda (M31) galaxy displays several substructures in its inner halo whose origin as remnants of accreted satellites or perturbations of the pre-existing disc are encoded in the properties of their stellar populations (SPs), leaving traces on their deep [OIII] 5007 \AA planetary nebulae luminosity functions (PNLFs). By characterizing the morphology of the PNLFs, we constrain their origin. From our 54 sq. deg. deep narrow-band [OIII] survey of M31, we identify planetary nebulae (PNe) in the M31 disc and six major inner-halo substructures - the Giant Stream, North East Shelf, G1-Clump, Northern Clump, Western Shelf and Stream-D. We measure PNLF parameters from cumulative fits and statistically compare the PNLFs in each substructure and the disc. We link the PNLF parameters and those for the Large Magellanic Cloud to published metallicities and age measurements for their parent SPs.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
