Is Draco II one of the faintest dwarf galaxies? First study from Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy

Abstract

We present the first spectroscopic analysis of the faint and compact stellar system Draco II (Dra II, MV=-2.9+/-0.8, rh=19+8-6 pc), recently discovered in the Pan-STARRS1 3π survey. The observations, conducted with DEIMOS on the Keck II telescope, establish some of its basic characteristics: the velocity data reveal a narrow peak with 9 member stars at a systemic heliocentric velocity <vr>=-347.6+1.7-1.8 km/s, thereby confirming Dra II is a satellite of the Milky Way; we infer a velocity dispersion with σvr=2.9+/-2.1 km/s (<8.4 km/s at the 95% confidence level), which implies log10(M1/2)=5.5+0.4-0.6 and log10((M/L)1/2)=2.7+0.5-0.8, in Solar units; furthermore, very weak Calcium triplet lines in the spectra of the high signal-to-noise member stars imply [Fe/H]<-2.1, whilst variations in the line strengths of two stars with similar colours and magnitudes suggest a metallicity spread in Dra II. These new data cannot clearly discriminate whether Draco II is a star cluster or amongst the faintest, most compact, and closest dwarf galaxies. However, the sum of the three --- individually inconclusive --- pieces of evidence presented here, seems to favour the dwarf galaxy interpretation.

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