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ABSTRACT We report the discovery of an ultrafaint dwarf in the constellation of Pegasus. Pegasus V (Peg V) /Andromeda XXXIV was initially identified in the public imaging data release of the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys and confirmed with deep imaging from Gemini/GMOS-N. The colour–magnitude diagram shows a sparse red giant branch (RGB) population and a strong overdensity of blue horizontal branch stars. We measure a distance to Peg V of D=692^+33-₃₁ kpc, making it a distant satellite of Andromeda with MV = −6. 3 ± 0. 2 and a half-light radius of rhalf = 89 ± 41 pc. It is located ∼260 kpc from Andromeda in the outskirts of its halo. The RGB is well fitted by a metal-poor isochrone with Fe/H = −3. 2, suggesting it is very metal poor. This, combined with its blue horizontal branch, could imply that it is a reionization fossil. This is the first detection of an ultrafaint dwarf outside the deep Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey area, and points to a rich, faint satellite population in the outskirts of our nearest neighbour.
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Michelle Collins
University College Dublin
Emily J E Charles
University of Surrey
David Martínez‐Delgado
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Letters
University of Surrey
Space Telescope Science Institute
Universidad de La Laguna
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Collins et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1ba40139ea7417dc431325 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnrasl/slac063
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