KK 242, a faint companion to the isolated Scd galaxy NGC 6503
Igor D. Karachentsev, John M. Cannon, Jackson Fuson, John L. Inoue, R., Brent Tully, Gagandeep S. Anand, Serafim S. Kaisin

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes KK 242 as a faint satellite galaxy of NGC 6503, measuring its distance, gas content, and star formation, and estimating the host galaxy's halo mass.
Contribution
First detailed measurement of KK 242's distance, gas content, and its role as a satellite of NGC 6503, providing insights into low-mass galaxy satellites in the Local Void.
Findings
KK 242 is at 6.46 Mpc distance, a satellite of NGC 6503.
KK 242 has a very faint HI signal with mass < 10^6 M_sun.
Estimated halo mass of NGC 6503 is 10^11.6 M_sun.
Abstract
Using Hubble Space Telescope imaging of the resolved stellar population of KK~242 = NGC6503-d1 = PGC~4689184, we measure the distance to the galaxy to be Mpc and find that KK~242 is a satellite of the low-mass spiral galaxy NGC~6503 located on the edge of the Local Void. Observations with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array show signs of a very faint HI-signal at the position of KK~242 within a velocity range of km\,s. This velocity range is severely contaminated by HI emission from the Milky Way and from NGC6503. The dwarf galaxy is classified as the transition type, dIrr/dSph, with a total HI-mass of and a star formation rate SFR(H) = --4.82 dex (/yr). Being at a projected separation of 31 kpc with a radial velocity difference of -- 105 km\,s relative to NGC~6503, KK~242 gives an estimate of the halo…
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