The Distance of the Dark Matter Deficient Galaxy NGC1052-DF2

Abstract

We recently inferred that the galaxy NGC1052-DF2 has little or no dark matter and a rich system of unusual globular clusters. We assumed that the galaxy is a satellite of the luminous elliptical galaxy NGC1052 at ~20 Mpc, on the basis of its surface brightness fluctuations (SBF) distance of 19.0 1.7 Mpc, its radial velocity of ~1800 km/s, and its projected position. Here we analyze the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of NGC1052-DF2, following the suggestion by Trujillo et al. (2018) that the tip of the red giant branch (TRGB) can be detected in currently available HST data and the galaxy is at ~13 Mpc. Using fully populated galaxy models we show that the CMD is strongly influenced by blends. These blends produce a "phantom" TRGB ~2 times brighter than the true TRGB, which can lead to erroneous distance estimates ~1.4 times smaller than the actual distance. We compare NGC1052-DF2 to model images as well as other galaxies in our HST sample, and show that the large population of unblended RGB stars expected for distances of ~13 Mpc is not detected. We also provide a new distance measurement to NGC1052-DF2 that is free of calibration uncertainties, by anchoring it to a satellite of the megamaser host galaxy NGC4258. From a megamaser-TRGB-SBF distance ladder we obtain D=18.7 1.7 Mpc, consistent with our previous measurement and with the distance to the elliptical galaxy NGC1052.

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