TiNy Titans HI: Discovering Satellites via HI Gas in an Isolated, Compact Group of Dwarf Galaxies
Sabrina Stierwalt, Nicholas Luber, Zelie Goldberg Little, George C. Privon, Gurtina Besla, Kelsey E. Johnson, Nitya Kallivayalil, David R. Patton, Mary Putman, David Simpson Heil

TL;DR
This study reveals the discovery of new dwarf satellites in an isolated dwarf galaxy group through HI gas observations, demonstrating the effectiveness of HI mapping in detecting faint satellites and providing insights into the group's dynamics and environment.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detection of faint dwarf satellites around dwarf galaxies using HI gas mapping, and compares their properties with simulations to understand group dynamics.
Findings
Discovered two new dwarf satellites via HI gas detection.
Group's properties align with TNG50 simulation predictions.
HI mapping can reveal faint satellites not visible optically.
Abstract
We report on the HI content of an isolated, compact group of 6 dwarf galaxies at a distance of 145 Mpc. The distribution and kinematics of the HI, including multiple gaseous bridges, indicate the group is a gravitationally bound system. The HI maps further reveal two newly discovered dwarf satellites easily identified by their gas but only barely visible in optical images. The four dwarf group members previously identified in SDSS have 9.06 < log(Mstar/Msun) < 9.43 and 9.42 < log(MHI/Msun) < 9.73. The two newly discovered dwarf satellites have log(Mstar/Msun) = 6.10 with log(MHI/Msun) = 8.71 and log(Mstar/Msun) = 7.07 with log(MHI/Msun) = 9.18. New Gemini optical spectra link the HI detections and their optical counterparts. The group's 3D velocity dispersion (188 km/s), mass-to-light ratio (M_L/B ~44), dynamical-to-baryonic mass ratio (Mdyn/Mbary ~ 21), size (69 kpc), and gas fraction…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
