Three Quenched, Faint Dwarf Galaxies in the Direction of NGC 300: New Probes of Reionization and Internal Feedback
D.J. Sand, B. Mutlu-Pakdil, M.G. Jones, A. Karunakaran, J.E. Andrews,, P. Bennet, D. Crnojevic, G. Donatiello, A. Drlica-Wagner, C. Fielder, D., Martinez-Delgado, C.E. Martinez-Vazquez, K. Spekkens, A. Doliva-Dolinsky,, L.C. Hunter, J.L. Carlin, W. Cerny, T.N. Hai, K.B.W McQuinn

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of three faint dwarf galaxies near NGC 300, providing new insights into galaxy quenching, reionization, and internal feedback effects in low-density environments.
Contribution
It presents the first identification of three ultra-faint dwarf galaxies in the vicinity of NGC 300, expanding understanding of galaxy evolution in isolated environments.
Findings
All three galaxies are quenched with old, metal-poor stellar populations.
Sculptor C is likely a satellite of NGC 300.
Sculptor A is probably in the foreground, similar to ultra-faint Tucana B.
Abstract
We report the discovery of three faint and ultra-faint dwarf galaxies -- Sculptor A, Sculptor B and Sculptor C -- in the direction of NGC 300 (D=2.0 Mpc), a Large Magellanic Cloud-mass galaxy. Deep ground-based imaging with Gemini/GMOS resolves all three dwarf galaxies into stars, each displaying a red giant branch indicative of an old, metal-poor stellar population. No young stars or HI gas are apparent, and the lack of a GALEX UV detection suggests that all three systems are quenched. Sculptor C (D=2.04 Mpc; =9.10.1 mag or =(3.7)10 ) is consistent with being a satellite of NGC 300. Sculptor A (D=1.35 Mpc; =6.90.3 mag or =(5)10 ) is likely in the foreground of NGC 300 and at the extreme edge of the Local Group, analogous to the recently…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
