Pegasus IV: Discovery and Spectroscopic Confirmation of an Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxy in the Constellation Pegasus
W. Cerny, J. D. Simon, T. S. Li, A. Drlica-Wagner, A. B. Pace, C. E., Mart{\i}nez-Vazquez, A. H. Riley, B. Mutlu-Pakdil, S. Mau, P. S. Ferguson, D., Erkal, R. R. Munoz, C. R. Bom, J. L. Carlin, D. Carollo, Y. Choi, A. P. Ji,, D. Mart{\i}nez-Delgado, V. Manwadkar, A. E. Miller

TL;DR
Pegasus IV is a newly discovered ultra-faint dwarf galaxy near the Milky Way, characterized by its dark matter dominance, extremely low metallicity, and complex orbital dynamics, expanding our understanding of satellite galaxy populations.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and spectroscopic confirmation of Pegasus IV as an ultra-faint dwarf galaxy, providing detailed measurements of its properties and dynamics for the first time.
Findings
Pegasus IV is a dark-matter-dominated dwarf galaxy.
It has an extremely low metallicity of [Fe/H] ≈ -2.67.
The galaxy is on an elliptical, retrograde orbit near its orbital apocenter.
Abstract
We report the discovery of Pegasus IV, an ultra-faint dwarf galaxy found in archival data from the Dark Energy Camera processed by the DECam Local Volume Exploration Survey. Pegasus IV is a compact, ultra-faint stellar system ( pc; mag) located at a heliocentric distance of kpc. Based on spectra of seven non-variable member stars observed with Magellan/IMACS, we confidently resolve Pegasus IV's velocity dispersion, measuring (after excluding three velocity outliers); this implies a mass-to-light ratio of for the system. From the five stars with the highest signal-to-noise spectra, we also measure a systemic metallicity of dex, making Pegasus IV one of the most metal-poor ultra-faint…
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