A Chemodynamical Census of the Milky Way's Ultra-Faint Compact Satellites. I. A First Population-Level Look at the Internal Kinematics and Metallicities of 19 Extremely-Low-Mass Halo Stellar Systems
William Cerny, Ting S. Li, Andrew B. Pace, Joshua D. Simon, Marla Geha, Alexander P. Ji, Alex Drlica-Wagner, Jordan Bruce, Oleg Y. Gnedin, Eric F. Bell, Sidney Mau, Ivanna Escala, Daisy Bissonette, Alessandro Savino, Anirudh Chiti, and Evan N. Kirby

TL;DR
This study provides the first spectroscopic census of 19 ultra-faint compact satellites in the Milky Way, revealing their kinematic and chemical diversity and suggesting some may be the smallest galaxies known.
Contribution
First spectroscopic survey of 19 ultra-faint compact satellites, offering insights into their internal kinematics and metallicities at the population level.
Findings
UFCSs are kinematically colder than UFDs.
They exhibit a wide range of metallicities, some below the metallicity floor of GCs.
Up to 50% of UFCSs may be the smallest galaxies discovered.
Abstract
Deep, wide-area photometric surveys have uncovered a population of compact ( 1-15 pc), extremely-low-mass ( 20-4000 ) stellar systems in the Milky Way halo that are smaller in size than known ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (UFDs) and substantially fainter than most classical globular clusters (GCs). Very little is known about the nature and origins of this population of "Ultra-Faint Compact Satellites" (UFCSs) owing to a dearth of spectroscopic measurements. Here, we present the first spectroscopic census of these compact systems based on Magellan/IMACS and Keck/DEIMOS observations of 19 individual UFCSs, representing 2/3 of the known population. We securely measure mean radial velocities for all 19 systems, velocity dispersions for 15 (predominantly upper limits), metallicities for 17, metallicity dispersions for 8, and -based…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
