Ultra-Faint Milky Way Satellites Discovered in Carina, Phoenix, and Telescopium with DELVE Data Release 3
Abstract
We report the discovery of three Milky Way satellite candidates: Carina IV, Phoenix III, and DELVE 7, in the third data release of the DECam Local Volume Exploration survey (DELVE). The candidate systems were identified by cross-matching results from two independent search algorithms. All three are extremely faint systems composed of old, metal-poor stellar populations (τ 10 Gyr, [Fe/H] -1.4). Carina IV (MV = -2.8;\ r1/2 = 40 pc) and Phoenix III (MV = -1.2;\ r1/2 = 19 pc) have half-light radii that are consistent with the known population of dwarf galaxies, while DELVE 7 (MV = 1.2;\ r1/2 = 2 pc) is very compact and seems more likely to be a star cluster, though its nature remains ambiguous without spectroscopic followup. The Gaia proper motions of stars in Carina IV (M* = 2250+1180-830 M) indicate that it is unlikely to be associated with the LMC, while DECam CaHK photometry confirms that its member stars are metal-poor. Phoenix III (M* = 520+660-290 M) is the faintest known satellite in the extreme outer stellar halo (D GC > 100 kpc), while DELVE 7 (M* = 60+120-40 M) is the faintest known satellite with D GC > 20 kpc.
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