Discovery of a close pair of faint dwarf galaxies in the halo of Centaurus A

Abstract

As part of the Panoramic Imaging Survey of Centaurus and Sculptor (PISCeS) we report the discovery of a pair of faint dwarf galaxies (CenA-MM-Dw1 and CenA-MM-Dw2) at a projected distance of 90 kpc from the nearby elliptical galaxy NGC5128 (CenA). We measure a tip of the red giant branch distance to each dwarf, finding D=3.63 0.41 Mpc for CenA-MM-Dw1 and D=3.60 0.41 Mpc for CenA-MM-Dw2, both of which are consistent with the distance to NGC5128. A qualitative analysis of the color magnitude diagrams indicates stellar populations consisting of an old, metal-poor red giant branch ( 12 Gyr, [Fe/H]-1.7 to -1.9). In addition, CenA-MM-Dw1 seems to host an intermediate-age population as indicated by its candidate asymptotic giant branch stars. The derived luminosities (MV=-10.90.3 for CenA-MM-Dw1 and -8.40.6 for CenA-MM-Dw2) and half-light radii (rh=1.40.04 kpc for CenA-MM-Dw1 and 0.360.08 kpc for CenA-MM-Dw2) are consistent with those of Local Group dwarfs. CenA-MM-Dw1's low central surface brightness (μV,0=27.30.1 mag/arcsec2) places it among the faintest and most extended M31 satellites. Most intriguingly, CenA-MM-Dw1 and CenA-MM-Dw2 have a projected separation of only 3 arcmin (3 kpc): we are possibly observing the first, faint satellite of a satellite in an external group of galaxies.

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