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We present WIYN observations of the recently discovered And IX dwarf spheroidal (dSph) satellite galaxy of M 31. Our data, obtained at a natural seeing of 0.5 and just reaching the horizontal branch level, confirm And IX as a dSph galaxy with a distance similar to M 31. A survey for carbon stars shows no evidence for an intermediate-age (1--10 Gyr) stellar population in And IX. From the red giant branch we estimate a metallicity of roughly -2 dex. Combined with the tip of the red giant branch luminosity, this results in a distance of 735 kpc, placing And IX approximately 45 kpc from M 31. This faint dSph follows the relations between luminosity and metallicity, and luminosity and surface brightness defined by other Local Group dSph galaxies. The core and tidal radii are found to be 1.35 and 5.9, respectively. We conclude that And IX -- despite its low luminosity -- might be an ordinary Local Group dSph and discuss implications for its formation from a once more massive, but stripped progenitor or from an intrinsically low-mass seed.
We present the discovery of a new dwarf galaxy, Perseus I/Andromeda XXXIII, found in the vicinity of Andromeda (M31) in stacked imaging data from the Pan-STARRS1 3{pi} survey. Located 27.9{deg} away from M31, Perseus I has a heliocentric distance of
We present BVR CCD photometry down to limiting magnitude B=23.5 mag for 232 starlike objects and 11 diffuse objects in a 5.4 x 5.4 field of Ho IX. The galaxy is a gas-rich irregular dwarf galaxy possibly very close to M 81, which makes it especially
Using archival imaging from the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 aboard the Hubble Space Telescope, we investigate the stellar populations of the Local Group dwarf spheroidal Andromeda V - a companion satellite galaxy of M31. The color-magnitude diagram
Dwarf satellite galaxies are thought to be the remnants of the population of primordial structures that coalesced to form giant galaxies like the Milky Way. An early analysis noted that dwarf galaxies may not be isotropically distributed around our G
In a spectroscopic survey of the Fornax cluster to Bj=17.5 using the FLAIR spectrograph on the UK Schmidt Telescope we have discovered seven new compact dwarf cluster members. These were previously thought to be giant background spirals. These new me