Exploring the Structures and Substructures of the Andromeda Satellite Dwarf Galaxies Cassiopeia III, Perseus I, and Lacerta I
Katherine L. Rhode, Nicholas J. Smith, Denija Crnojevic, David J., Sand, Ryan A. Lambert, Enrico Vesperini, Madison V. Smith, Steven Janowiecki,, John J. Salzer, Ananthan Karunakaran, and Kristine Spekkens

TL;DR
This study investigates the structure, distances, and substructures of three Andromeda satellite dwarf galaxies using wide-field imaging, revealing their properties and potential substructures within their stellar populations.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of distances, structural parameters, and substructure analysis for Cassiopeia III, Perseus I, and Lacerta I, expanding understanding of their morphology and environment.
Findings
Distances derived using TRGB method are consistent with previous HST data.
Lacerta I shows a significant overdense region and a possible filament.
Cassiopeia III exhibits modest overdensities near its center.
Abstract
We present results from wide-field imaging of the resolved stellar populations of the dwarf spheroidal galaxies Cassiopeia III (And XXXII) and Perseus I (And XXXIII), two satellites in the outer stellar halo of the Andromeda galaxy (M31). Our WIYN pODI photometry traces the red giant star population in each galaxy to ~2.5-3 half-light radii from the galaxy center. We use the Tip of the Red Giant Branch (TRGB) method to derive distances of (m-M)_0 = 24.62+/-0.12 mag (839 (+48,-450) kpc, or 156 (+16,-13) kpc from M31) for Cas III and 24.47+/-0.13 mag (738 (+48,-45) kpc, or 351 (+17,-16) kpc from M31) for Per I. These values are consistent within the errors with TRGB distances derived from a deeper Hubble Space Telescope study of the galaxies' inner regions. For each galaxy, we derive structural parameters, total magnitude, and central surface brightness. We also place upper limits on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
