Deep Photometric Observations of Ultra-Faint Milky Way Satellites Centaurus I and Eridanus IV
Quinn O. Casey, Bur\c{c}in Mutlu-Pakdil, David J. Sand, Andrew B., Pace, Denija Crnojevic, Amandine Doliva-Dolinsky, William Cerny, Mairead E., Heiger, Alex H. Riley, Alexander P. Ji, Guilherme Limberg, Laurella Marin,, Clara E. Mart\'inez-V\'azquez, Gustavo E. Medina

TL;DR
This study provides deep imaging and detailed structural analysis of the ultra-faint Milky Way satellites Centaurus I and Eridanus IV, revealing their old, metal-poor stellar populations, sizes, distances, and morphological features, including signs of possible tidal disturbance.
Contribution
It offers the first deep photometric measurements of Cen I and Eri IV, constraining their properties and investigating their structural integrity and potential tidal interactions.
Findings
Cen I is an old, metal-poor dwarf galaxy with no signs of tidal disruption.
Eri IV shows extended features possibly indicating tidal effects.
Both satellites' properties align with known Milky Way dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
We present deep MagellanMegacam imaging of Centaurus I (Cen I) and Eridanus IV (Eri IV), two recently discovered Milky Way ultra-faint satellites. Our data reach magnitudes deeper than the discovery data from the DECam Local Volume Exploration (DELVE) Survey. We use these data to constrain their distances, structural properties (e.g., half-light radii, ellipticity, and position angle), and luminosities. We investigate whether these systems show signs of tidal disturbance, and identify new potential member stars using Gaia EDR3. Our deep color-magnitude diagrams show that Cen I and Eri IV are consistent with an old ( Gyr) and metal-poor () stellar population. We find Cen I to have a half-light radius of ( pc), an ellipticity of , a distance of kpc (…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
