The low-mass and structured stellar halo of M83 argues against a merger origin for its starburst and extended neutral hydrogen disk
Eric F. Bell, Benjamin Harmsen, Matthew Cosby, Paul A. Price, Sarah Pearson, Antonela Monachesi, Roelof S. de Jong, Richard D'Souza, Katya Gozman, Jacob Nibauer, Michael P. Busch, Jeremy Bailin, Benne W. Holwerda, In Sung Jang, Adam Smercina

TL;DR
This study investigates M83's stellar halo and streams to test the merger hypothesis for its starburst and extended HI disk, finding evidence against mergers being the primary cause and suggesting alternative mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed observations of M83's stellar halo and streams, showing that recent mergers are unlikely to explain its starburst and HI disk, highlighting the role of non-merger processes.
Findings
M83 has an extended, low-density, metal-poor stellar halo.
Discovery of a new stellar stream possibly from a recent accretion.
Recent accretion events do not correlate with starburst activity.
Abstract
A merger origin has been suggested for M83's massive, metal-rich extended HI disk and nuclear starburst. We observe M83's stellar halo to test this idea. We train nearest-neighbor star-galaxy separation on wide-area Subaru imaging with Hubble Space Telescope data to map M83's halo in resolved stars. We find that M83 has an extended, very low density smooth stellar halo of old and metal-poor [M/H] RGB stars with a mass between 15 and 40 kpc of . In addition to M83's well-known Northern Stream, our ground-based Subaru imaging reveals a new stream to M83's south, which modeling suggests could be its trailing arm. The combined stream masses are , with metallicity [M/H]. The stream progenitor was only recently accreted, as its stellar populations suggest that it formed stars…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
