First resolved stellar halo kinematics of a MW-mass galaxy outside the Local Group: A flat counter-rotating halo in NGC 4945
Camila Beltrand, Antonela Monachesi, Richard D'Souza, Eric F. Bell,, Roelof S. de Jong, Facundo A. Gomez, Jeremy Bailin, In Sung Jang, Adam, Smercina

TL;DR
This study presents the first kinematic measurement of a stellar halo in a Milky Way-mass galaxy outside the Local Group, revealing a counter-rotating halo in NGC 4945 using a novel spectroscopic technique.
Contribution
It introduces a new method combining deep spectroscopy and imaging to measure stellar halo kinematics in external galaxies, enabling insights into their accretion history.
Findings
The stellar halo of NGC 4945 is counter-rotating relative to the galaxy disk.
The halo's velocity dispersion suggests an accretion origin.
This work demonstrates a novel approach for halo kinematic studies in nearby galaxies.
Abstract
Stellar halos of galaxies, primarily formed through the accretion of smaller objects, are important to understand the hierarchical mass assembly of galaxies. However, the inner regions of stellar halos in disk galaxies are predicted to have an in-situ component that is expected to be prominent along the major axis. Kinematic information is crucial to disentangle the contribution of the in-situ component from the accreted stellar halos. The low surface brightness of stellar halos makes it inaccessible with traditional integrated light spectroscopy. In this work, using a novel technique, we study the kinematics of the stellar halo of the edge-on galaxy NGC 4945. We couple new deep Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer spectroscopic observations with existing Hubble Space Telescope imaging data to spectroscopically measure the line-of-sight (LOS) heliocentric velocity and velocity dispersion…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
