A giant shell of ionized gas discovered near M82 with the Dragonfly Spectral Line Mapper pathfinder
Deborah Lokhorst, Roberto Abraham, Imad Pasha, Pieter van Dokkum,, Seery Chen, Tim Miller, Shany Danieli, Johnny Greco, Jielai Zhang, Allison, Merritt, and Charlie Conroy

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a giant ionized gas shell near M82, using a prototype instrument that demonstrates the capabilities of the upcoming Dragonfly Spectral Line Mapper for ultranarrow-band imaging.
Contribution
It introduces the first detection of a large ionized gas cloud near M82 with detailed spectral analysis, showcasing the potential of the Dragonfly Pathfinder for future spectral line mapping.
Findings
Discovered a 55 kpc ionized gas shell near M82.
Spectral line ratios suggest complex ionization conditions.
Demonstrated the Pathfinder instrument's effectiveness for spectral line detection.
Abstract
We present the discovery of a giant cloud of ionized gas in the field of the starbursting galaxy M82. Emission from the cloud is seen in H and [NII]6583 in data obtained though a small pathfinder instrument used to test the key ideas that will be implemented in the Dragonfly Spectral Line Mapper, an upcoming ultranarrow-bandpass imaging version of the Dragonfly Telephoto Array. The discovered cloud has a shell-like morphology with a linear extent of and is positioned northwest of M82. At the heliocentric distance of the M81 group, the cloud's extent corresponds to 55 kpc and its projected distance from the nucleus of M82 is 40 kpc. The cloud has an average H surface brightness of . The [NII]6583/H line ratio varies from…
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