Tucana B: An Isolated and Quenched Ultra-faint Dwarf Galaxy at D=1.4 Mpc [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2205.09129


We report the discovery of Tucana B, an isolated ultra-faint dwarf galaxy at a distance of D=1.4 Mpc. Tucana B was found during a search for ultra-faint satellite companions to the known dwarfs in the outskirts of the Local Group, although its sky position and distance indicate the nearest galaxy to be $\sim$500 kpc distant. Deep ground-based imaging resolves Tucana B into stars, and it displays a sparse red giant branch consistent with an old, metal poor stellar population analogous to that seen in the ultra-faint dwarf galaxies of the Milky Way, albeit at fainter apparent magnitudes. Tucana B has a half-light radius of 80$\pm$35 pc, and an absolute magnitude of $M_V$=$-$6.9$\pm$0.3 mag ($L_V$=5.0$\pm$1.5$\times$10$^4$ $L_{\odot}$), which is again comparable to the Milky Way’s ultra-faint satellites. There is no evidence for a population of young stars, either in the optical color magnitude diagram or in GALEX archival ultraviolet imaging. Likewise, archival HI observations indicate that Tucana B has no neutral gas reservoir, although it is in a portion of the sky contaminated with complex HI features associated with the Milky Way. Given its isolation and physical properties, Tucana B may be a definitive example of an ultra-faint dwarf that has been quenched by reionization, providing strong confirmation of a key driver of galaxy formation and evolution at the lowest mass scales. It also signals a new era of ultra-faint dwarf galaxy discovery at the extreme edges of the Local Group.

Read this paper on arXiv…

D. Sand, B. Mutlu-Pakdil, M. Jones, et. al.
Fri, 20 May 22
10/65

Comments: 11 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Letters submitted