We present a generic algorithm to search for dwarf galaxies in photometric
catalogs and apply it to the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS). The
algorithm is developed in a Bayesian framework and, contrary to most
dwarf-galaxy-search codes, makes use of both the spatial and color-magnitude
information of sources in a probabilistic approach. Accounting for the
significant contamination from the Milky Way foreground and from the structured
stellar halo of the Andromeda galaxy, we recover all known dwarf galaxies in
the PAndAS footprint with high significance, even for the least luminous ones.
Some Andromeda globular clusters are also recovered and, in one case,
discovered. We publish a list of the 143 most significant detections yielded by
the algorithm. The combined properties of the 39 most significant isolated
detections show hints that at least some of these trace genuine dwarf galaxies,
too faint to be individually detected. Follow-up observations by the community
are mandatory to establish which are real members of the Andromeda satellite
system. The search technique presented here will be used in an upcoming
contribution to determine the PAndAS completeness limits for dwarf galaxies.
Although here tuned to the search of dwarf galaxies in the PAndAS data, the
algorithm can easily be adapted to the search for any localised overdensity
whose properties can be modeled reliably in the parameter space of any catalog.
Описание
[1307.7626] The PAndAS view of the Andromeda satellite system - I. A Bayesian search for dwarf galaxies using spatial and color-magnitude information
%0 Generic
%1 martin2013pandas
%A Martin, Nicolas F.
%A Ibata, Rodrigo A.
%A McConnachie, Alan W.
%A Mackey, A. Dougal
%A Ferguson, Annette M. N.
%A Irwin, Michael J.
%A Lewis, Geraint F.
%A Fardal, Mark A.
%D 2013
%K dwarf m31 satellite
%T The PAndAS view of the Andromeda satellite system - I. A Bayesian search
for dwarf galaxies using spatial and color-magnitude information
%U http://arxiv.org/abs/1307.7626
%X We present a generic algorithm to search for dwarf galaxies in photometric
catalogs and apply it to the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS). The
algorithm is developed in a Bayesian framework and, contrary to most
dwarf-galaxy-search codes, makes use of both the spatial and color-magnitude
information of sources in a probabilistic approach. Accounting for the
significant contamination from the Milky Way foreground and from the structured
stellar halo of the Andromeda galaxy, we recover all known dwarf galaxies in
the PAndAS footprint with high significance, even for the least luminous ones.
Some Andromeda globular clusters are also recovered and, in one case,
discovered. We publish a list of the 143 most significant detections yielded by
the algorithm. The combined properties of the 39 most significant isolated
detections show hints that at least some of these trace genuine dwarf galaxies,
too faint to be individually detected. Follow-up observations by the community
are mandatory to establish which are real members of the Andromeda satellite
system. The search technique presented here will be used in an upcoming
contribution to determine the PAndAS completeness limits for dwarf galaxies.
Although here tuned to the search of dwarf galaxies in the PAndAS data, the
algorithm can easily be adapted to the search for any localised overdensity
whose properties can be modeled reliably in the parameter space of any catalog.
@misc{martin2013pandas,
abstract = {We present a generic algorithm to search for dwarf galaxies in photometric
catalogs and apply it to the Pan-Andromeda Archaeological Survey (PAndAS). The
algorithm is developed in a Bayesian framework and, contrary to most
dwarf-galaxy-search codes, makes use of both the spatial and color-magnitude
information of sources in a probabilistic approach. Accounting for the
significant contamination from the Milky Way foreground and from the structured
stellar halo of the Andromeda galaxy, we recover all known dwarf galaxies in
the PAndAS footprint with high significance, even for the least luminous ones.
Some Andromeda globular clusters are also recovered and, in one case,
discovered. We publish a list of the 143 most significant detections yielded by
the algorithm. The combined properties of the 39 most significant isolated
detections show hints that at least some of these trace genuine dwarf galaxies,
too faint to be individually detected. Follow-up observations by the community
are mandatory to establish which are real members of the Andromeda satellite
system. The search technique presented here will be used in an upcoming
contribution to determine the PAndAS completeness limits for dwarf galaxies.
Although here tuned to the search of dwarf galaxies in the PAndAS data, the
algorithm can easily be adapted to the search for any localised overdensity
whose properties can be modeled reliably in the parameter space of any catalog.},
added-at = {2013-07-30T13:49:41.000+0200},
author = {Martin, Nicolas F. and Ibata, Rodrigo A. and McConnachie, Alan W. and Mackey, A. Dougal and Ferguson, Annette M. N. and Irwin, Michael J. and Lewis, Geraint F. and Fardal, Mark A.},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/218cf30270db92f58517149445e10b966/miki},
description = {[1307.7626] The PAndAS view of the Andromeda satellite system - I. A Bayesian search for dwarf galaxies using spatial and color-magnitude information},
interhash = {e7afa2814eb69bec1f065a97db62bbce},
intrahash = {18cf30270db92f58517149445e10b966},
keywords = {dwarf m31 satellite},
note = {cite arxiv:1307.7626Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in ApJ},
timestamp = {2013-07-30T13:49:42.000+0200},
title = {The PAndAS view of the Andromeda satellite system - I. A Bayesian search
for dwarf galaxies using spatial and color-magnitude information},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/1307.7626},
year = 2013
}