A Neighboring Dwarf Irregular Galaxy Hidden by the Milky Way

2003 
We have obtained VLA and optical follow-up observations of the low-velocity H I source HIZSS 3 discovered by Henning et al. (2000) and Rivers (2000) in a survey for nearby galaxies hidden by the disk of the Milky Way. Its radio characteristics are consistent with this being a nearby (~1.8 Mpc) low-mass dwarf irregular galaxy (dIm). Our optical imaging failed to reveal a resolved stellar population, but did detect an extended H-alpha emission region. The location of the H-alpha source is coincident with a partially-resolved H I cloud in the 21-cm map. Spectroscopy confirms that the H$\alpha$ source has a similar radial velocity to that of the H I emission at this location, and thus we have identified an optical counterpart. The H$\alpha$ emission (100 pc in diameter and with a luminosity of $1.4\times10^{38}$ ergs s$^{-1}$) is characteristic of a single H II region containing a modest population of OB stars. The galaxy's radial velocity and distance from the solar apex suggests that it is not a Local Group member, although a more accurate distance is needed to be certain. The properties of HIZSS 3 are comparable to those of GR 8, a nearby dIm with a modest amount of current star formation. Further observations are needed to characterize its stellar population, determine the chemical abundances, and obtain a more reliable distance estimate.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []