The TREX Survey: Kinematical Complexity Throughout M33's Stellar Disk and Evidence for a Stellar Halo
Karoline M. Gilbert, Amanda C. N. Quirk, Puragra Guhathakurta, Erik, Tollerud, Jennifer Wojno, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Meredith J. Durbin, Anil, Seth, Benjamin F. Williams, Justin T. Fung, Pujita Tangirala, and Ibrahim, Yusufali

TL;DR
This study uses spectroscopic data of M33's stars to identify and characterize a kinematically hot stellar halo component, revealing its spatial extent and properties within the galaxy.
Contribution
First detection and spatial analysis of M33's stellar halo component using a large spectroscopic survey of RGB stars.
Findings
Identification of a high velocity dispersion stellar component consistent with a halo
The halo component shows little to no rotation in the galaxy plane
The halo fraction decreases with increasing radius from the galaxy center
Abstract
We present initial results from a large spectroscopic survey of stars throughout M33's stellar disk. We analyze a sample of 1667 red giant branch (RGB) stars extending to projected distances of kpc from M33's center ( kpc, or scale lengths, in the plane of the disk). The line-of-sight velocities of RGB stars show the presence of two kinematical components. One component is consistent with rotation in the plane of M33's HI disk and has a velocity dispersion ( km s) consistent with that observed in a comparison sample of younger stars, while the second component has a significantly higher velocity dispersion. A two-component fit to the RGB velocity distribution finds that the high dispersion component has a velocity dispersion of km s and rotates very slowly in the plane of the disk (consistent with no rotation at…
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