Bibcode
Martin, N. F.; Jungbluth, Valentin; Nidever, David L.; Bell, Eric F.; Besla, Gurtina; Blum, Robert D.; Cioni, Maria-Rosa L.; Conn, Blair C.; Kaleida, Catherine C.; Gallart, C.; Jin, Shoko; Majewski, Steven R.; Martinez-Delgado, David; Monachesi, Antonela; Muñoz, Ricardo R.; Noël, Noelia E. D.; Olsen, Knut; Stringfellow, Guy S.; van der Marel, Roeland P.; Vivas, A. Katherina; Walker, Alistair R.; Zaritsky, Dennis
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal Letters, Volume 830, Issue 1, article id. L10, 6 pp. (2016).
Advertised on:
10
2016
Citations
28
Refereed citations
26
Description
We present the discovery of a very faint stellar system, SMASH 1, that
is potentially a satellite of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Found within
the Survey of the Magellanic Stellar History (SMASH), SMASH 1 is a
compact ({r}h={9.1}-3.4+5.9 {pc}) and
very low luminosity ({M}V=-1.0+/- 0.9,
{L}V={10}2.3+/- 0.4 {L}ȯ ) stellar
system that is revealed by its sparsely populated main sequence and a
handful of red giant branch candidate member stars. The photometric
properties of these stars are compatible with a metal-poor
([{Fe}/{{H}}]=-2.2) and old (13 Gyr) isochrone located at a distance
modulus of ∼18.8, i.e., a distance of ∼ 57 {kpc}. Situated at
11.°3 from the LMC in projection, its three-dimensional distance
from the Cloud is ∼ 13 {kpc}, consistent with a connection to the
LMC, whose tidal radius is at least 16 {kpc}. Although the nature of
SMASH 1 remains uncertain, its compactness favors it being a stellar
cluster and hence dark-matter free. If this is the case, its dynamical
tidal radius is only ≲ 19 {pc} at this distance from the LMC, and
smaller than the system’s extent on the sky. Its low luminosity
and apparent high ellipticity (ε
={0.62}-0.21+0.17) with its major axis pointing
toward the LMC may well be the tell-tale sign of its imminent tidal
demise.