Euclid: Early Release Observations -- The extended stellar component of the IC10 dwarf galaxy
F. Annibali (1), A. M. N. Ferguson (2), P. M. Sanchez-Alarcon (3, 4), P. Dimauro (5, 6), L. K. Hunt (7), R. Pascale (1), M. Bellazzini (1), A. Lan\c{c}on (8), P. Jablonka (9), J. M. Howell (2), K. Voggel (8), J.-C. Cuillandre (10), Abdurro'uf (11), G. Battaglia (12)

TL;DR
This paper uses Euclid's deep imaging to map the extended stellar component of the dwarf galaxy IC 10, revealing a more extensive distribution, a complex stellar profile, and potential signs of tidal interactions, along with a new distance estimate.
Contribution
First detailed analysis of IC 10's extended stellar component using Euclid data, revealing its structure, mass, and possible tidal features, and providing a new distance measurement.
Findings
IC 10's stellar distribution extends up to 8 kpc.
The stellar profile shows a flattening beyond 5 kpc.
Estimated old stellar mass is approximately 7 billion solar masses.
Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of the old, extended stellar component of the Local Group dwarf galaxy IC 10 using deep resolved-star photometry in the VIS and NISP bands of the Euclid Early Release Observations. Leveraging Euclid's unique combination of wide field of view and high spatial resolution, we trace red giant branch (RGB) stars out to 8 kpc from the galaxy centre, reaching azimuthally-averaged surface brightness levels as faint as 29 mag arcsec. Our analysis reveals that IC 10's stellar distribution is significantly more extended than previously thought. After correcting for foreground extinction and subtracting contamination from Milky Way stars and background galaxies, we derive a radial stellar density profile from RGB star counts. The profile shows a marked flattening beyond 5 kpc, and is best fit by a two-component (Sersic + exponential)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Space Technology and Applications
