Lacerta I and Cassiopeia III: Two luminous and distant Andromeda satellite dwarf galaxies found in the 3π Pan-STARRS1 survey
Abstract
We report the discovery of two new dwarf galaxies, Lacerta I/Andromeda XXXI (Lac I/And XXXI) and Cassiopeia III/Andromeda XXXII (Cas III/And XXXII), in stacked Pan-STARRS1 rP1- and iP1-band imaging data. Both are luminous systems (MV ~ -12) located at projected distances of 20.3 and 10.5 from M31. Lac I and Cas III are likely satellites of the Andromeda galaxy with heliocentric distances of 756+44-28 kpc and 772+61-56 kpc, respectively, and corresponding M31-centric distances of 275+/-7 kpc and 144+6-4 kpc . The brightest of recent Local Group member discoveries, these two new dwarf galaxies owe their late discovery to their large sizes (rh = 4.2+0.4-0.5 arcmin or 912+124-93 pc for Lac I; rh = 6.5+1.2-1.0 arcmin or 1456+/-267 pc for Cas III), and consequently low surface brightness (μ0 ~ 26.0 mag/arcsec2), as well as to the lack of a systematic survey of regions at large radii from M31, close to the Galactic plane. This latter limitation is now alleviated by the 3π Pan-STARRS1 survey, which could lead to the discovery of other distant Andromeda satellite dwarf galaxies.
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