Abstract
NGC 4449 is a nearby Magellanic irregular starburst galaxy1 with a B-band absolute magnitude of −18 and a prominent, massive, intermediate-age nucleus2 at a distance from Earth of 3.8 megaparsecs (ref. 3). It is wreathed in an extraordinary neutral hydrogen (H i) complex, which includes rings, shells and a counter-rotating core, spanning ∼90 kiloparsecs (kpc; refs 1, 4). NGC 4449 is relatively isolated5, although an interaction with its nearest known companion—the galaxy DDO 125, some 40 kpc to the south—has been proposed as being responsible for the complexity of its H i structure6. Here we report the presence of a dwarf galaxy companion to NGC 4449, namely NGC 4449B. This companion has a V-band absolute magnitude of −13.4 and a half-light radius of 2.7 kpc, with a full extent of around 8 kpc. It is in a transient stage of tidal disruption, similar to that of the Sagittarius dwarf7 near the Milky Way. NGC 4449B exhibits a striking S-shaped morphology that has been predicted for disrupting galaxies7,8 but has hitherto been seen only in a dissolving globular cluster9. We also detect an additional arc or disk ripple embedded in a two-component stellar halo, including a component extending twice as far as previously known, to about 20 kpc from the galaxy’s centre.
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Acknowledgements
R.M.R. acknowledges support from the National Science Foundation. The Saturn Lodge 0.7-m telescope was funded and implemented by R.M.R. and F.A.L. The authors acknowledge members of the Polaris Observatory Association, who maintain the observatory infrastructure and who assisted in the construction and implementation of the telescope and enclosure, and J. Riffle, who designed and built the Centurion 28-inch telescope. This research has made use of the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED) and of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
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R.M.R. conceived the project, obtained the data and coordinated the activity. M.L.M.C. fitted the surface photometry of NGC 4449 and NGC 4449B. C.M.B., F.M.L. and D.B.R. analysed and reduced various aspects of the dataset, including the surface photometry. F.A.L. and R.M.R. implemented the Saturn Lodge 0.7-m telescope and detector system. A.K. provided insight on dwarf galaxies and discussion, and A.B. provided a discussion of theoretical implications.
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Rich, R., Collins, M., Black, C. et al. A tidally distorted dwarf galaxy near NGC 4449. Nature 482, 192–194 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10837
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature10837
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