Jump to content
Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia

Ursa Major III

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Extremely faint candidate satellite galaxy of the Milky Way
Ursa Major III / UNIONS 1
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
Constellation Ursa Major
Right ascension 11h 38m 49.8s[1]
Declination +31° 04′ 42″[1]
Distance 32.6±3.3 kly
(10±1 kpc)[1]
Absolute magnitude (V)+2.2+0.4
−0.3
[1]
Characteristics
Type dSph[1]
Mass/Light ratio 6500[1]  M/L
Number of stars57+21
−19
[1]
Half-light radius (physical)3±1 pc[1]
Half-light radius (apparent)0.9′[1]
Other designations
UMa III, UNIONS 1
Location of Ursa Major III / UNIONS 1, a possible dwarf satellite galaxy near the Milky Way

Ursa Major III / UNIONS 1 (UMa III / U1) is a possible dwarf satellite galaxy of the Milky Way, the smallest and faintest ever discovered.[2] It was found by the deep, wide field Ultraviolet Near Infrared Optical Northern Survey (UNIONS), a collaboration between the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope and Pan-STARRS (two observatories in Hawaii) and spectroscopically confirmed as a real satellite based on data obtained with the Keck Observatory's Deep Imaging Multi-Object Spectrograph (DEIMOS).

Ursa Major III's discovery was announced in November 2023, with a paper appearing in The Astrophysical Journal in January 2024. It contains a metal-poor stellar population, indicating an extreme age of 11 billion years. Located about 32,600 light years away, it has a diameter of just 19.6 light years and is thought to contain only about 60 stars. Combined with its absolute magnitude of only +2.2, this makes it by far the Milky Way's dimmest satellite, and only about as bright as Altair. This absolute magnitude corresponds to a total luminosity of 11.4 L.[1]

Dynamical measurements of Ursa Major III / UNIONS 1's stars suggest it may have a mass-to-light ratio of about 6,500. However, this becomes only 1,900 with the removal of one of the stars suspected to be part of the system. This very high value may indicate the presence of a massive dark matter halo, suggesting that Ursa Major III could indeed be a true dwarf galaxy, albeit one with an extremely low stellar mass. Alternatively, it may be the faintest globular cluster ever discovered. [1] Ursa Major III's total stellar mass is only about 16 M , making it the least massive Milky Way satellite known and by far the least massive galaxy known, if it is proven to truly be a galaxy in future research.

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Smith, Simon E. T.; Cerny, William; Hayes, Christian R.; Sestito, Federico; Jensen, Jaclyn; McConnachie, Alan W.; Geha, Marla; Navarro, Julio; Li, Ting S. (January 2024), "The discovery of the faintest known Milky Way satellite using UNIONS", The Astrophysical Journal , 961 (1): 92, arXiv:2311.10147 , Bibcode:2024ApJ...961...92S, doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ad0d9f
  2. ^ Kuthunur, Sharmila (3 April 2024). "Group of 60 faint stars orbiting the Milky Way could be new type of galaxy never seen before". Live Science. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
Location
‹ The template below (Earth's location in the Universe ) is being considered for merging with LocationOfEarth-ImageMap. See templates for discussion to help reach a consensus. ›
Milky Way  Milky Way subgroup  Local Group Local Sheet Virgo Supercluster Laniakea Supercluster  Local Hole  Observable universe  Universe
Each arrow () may be read as "within" or "part of".
The Milky Way Galaxy
The Milky Way Galaxy
Structure
Galactic Center
Disk
Halo
Satellite
galaxies
Magellanic Clouds
Dwarfs
Related
2023 in space
Space probe launches Space probes launched in 2023

Impact events
Selected NEOs
Discoveries
Exoplanets Exoplanets discovered in 2023
Comets Comets in 2023
Space exploration
Stub icon

This galaxy-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /