Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Search
2000 character limit reached

Deep Imaging of M51: a New View of the Whirlpool's Extended Tidal Debris

Published 19 Jan 2015 in astro-ph.GA | (1501.04599v1)

Abstract: We present deep, wide-field imaging of the M51 system using CWRU's Burrell Schmidt telescope at KPNO to study the faint tidal features that constrain its interaction history. Our images trace M51's tidal morphology down to a limiting surface brightness of $\mu_{B,lim}\sim $30 mag arcsec${-2}$, and provide accurate colors ($\sigma_{B-V} < 0.1$) down to $\mu_B\sim 28$. We identify two new tidal streams in the system (the South and Northeast Plumes) with surface brightnesses of $\mu_B =29$ and luminosities of $\sim 106 L_{\odot,B}$. While the Northeast Plume may be a faint outer extension of the tidal "crown" north of NGC 5195 (M51b), the South Plume has no analogue in any existing M51 simulation and may represent a distinct tidal stream or disrupted dwarf galaxy. We also trace the extremely diffuse Northwest Plume out to a total extent of 20' (43 kpc) from NGC 5194(M51a), and show it to be physically distinct from the overlapping bright tidal streams from M51b. The Northwest Plume's morphology and red color ($B-V=0.8$) instead argue that it originated from tidal stripping of M51a's extreme outer disk. Finally, we confirm the strong segregation of gas and stars in the Southeast Tail, and do not detect any diffuse stellar component in the HI portion of the tail. Extant simulations of M51 have difficulty matching both the wealth of tidal structure in the system and the lack of stars in the HI tail, motivating new modeling campaigns to study the dynamical evolution of this classic interacting system.

Citations (22)

Summary

Paper to Video (Beta)

Whiteboard

No one has generated a whiteboard explanation for this paper yet.

Open Problems

We haven't generated a list of open problems mentioned in this paper yet.

Continue Learning

We haven't generated follow-up questions for this paper yet.

Collections

Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.