Deep imaging of the galaxy Malin 2 shows new faint structures and a candidate satellite dwarf galaxy
Junais, Ignacio Ruiz Cejudo, Sergio Guerra Arencibia, Ignacio Trujillo, Miguel R. Alarcon, Miquel Serra-Ricart, Johan H. Knapen, Pierre-Alain Duc

TL;DR
Deep, multi-band optical imaging of Malin 2 reveals new faint structures, a candidate satellite dwarf galaxy, and azimuthal variations, providing insights into the formation and complexity of giant low surface brightness galaxies.
Contribution
This study presents the deepest optical imaging of Malin 2 to date, uncovering new faint features and a potential satellite, advancing understanding of GLSB galaxy structures and formation.
Findings
Detection of new diffuse structures and faint spiral features.
Identification of a candidate satellite dwarf galaxy, TTT-d1.
Evidence of tidal interactions influencing Malin 2's disk.
Abstract
Giant Low Surface Brightness (GLSB) galaxies are extreme disk systems with exceptionally large sizes and low stellar densities. Their formation and evolution remain poorly constrained due to the challenges of detecting their faint disks. We present deep, multi-band optical imaging of Malin 2, a prototypical GLSB galaxy, with the newly commissioned Two-meter Twin Telescope (TTT) at the Teide Observatory. Our , , and -band data reach surface brightness depths of 30.3, 29.5, and 28.2 mag arcsec (3, ), tracing the stellar disk of Malin 2 to 110 kpc. We detect new diffuse structures, including a prominent emission in the northwest coincident with the HI distribution, and a faint spiral arm-like feature in the southeast. We also identify a very faint dwarf galaxy, TTT-d1 ( mag arcsec), about…
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