Willman 1 Revisited: The Kinematics, Chemistry, and Orbital Properties of a Potentially-Disrupting Dwarf Galaxy
Camille Chiu, Marla Geha, William Cerny, Nitya Kallivayalil, Hannah Richstein, Christopher T. Garling, and Beth Willman

TL;DR
This study re-examines Willman 1 using spectroscopy, photometry, and orbital modeling, confirming it as a galaxy with potential tidal disruption, but notes uncertainties in its mass estimate due to possible disruption effects.
Contribution
It provides an updated analysis of Willman 1's kinematics, chemistry, and orbit, clarifying its classification as a galaxy and highlighting possible tidal disruption effects.
Findings
Velocity dispersion consistent with previous analyses
Estimated dynamical mass of approximately 6 x 10^5 solar masses
Orbit suggests recent close approach to the Milky Way, indicating possible tidal disruption.
Abstract
The ultra-faint Milky Way satellite Willman 1 (W1; ; pc) was the first stellar over-density found via resolved stars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, yet its classification as either a dwarf galaxy or star cluster remains ambiguous. Using new Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy, HST/ACS photometry, and orbital modeling, we re-examine the nature of W1. From our updated sample of 56 member stars, we find that past analyses included four binaries and seven nonmembers, identified here using Gaia proper motions and updated velocities. We continue to find a velocity dispersion consistent with previous analyses, measuring km s from 49 stars out to . If W1 is in equilibrium, this suggests a dynamical mass of and a mass-to-light ratio of . Based on Ca II…
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