Perseus I: A distant satellite dwarf galaxy of Andromeda

Abstract

We present the discovery of a new dwarf galaxy, Perseus I/Andromeda XXXIII, found in the vicinity of Andromeda (M31) in stacked imaging data from the Pan-STARRS1 3π survey. Located 27.9 away from M31, Perseus I has a heliocentric distance of 785 +/- 65 kpc, compatible with it being a satellite of M31 at 374 +14/-10 kpc from its host. The properties of Perseus I are typical for a reasonably bright dwarf galaxy (MV = -10.3 +/- 0.7), with an exponential half-light radius of rh = 1.7 +/- 0.4 arcminutes or rh = 400 +105/-85 pc at this distance, and a moderate ellipticity (ε = 0.43 +0.15/-0.17). The late discovery of Perseus I is due to its fairly low surface brightness (μ0=25.7 +1.0/-0.9 mag/arcsec2), and to the previous lack of deep, high quality photometric data in this region. If confirmed to be a companion of M31, the location of Perseus I, far east from its host, could place interesting constraints on the bulk motion of the satellite system of M31.

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