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Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy

The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy (Sgr dSph), also known as the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy (Sgr dE or Sag DEG), is an elliptical loop-shaped satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. It contains four globular clusters in its main body,[8] with the brightest of them—NGC 6715 (M54)—being known well before the discovery of the galaxy itself in 1994. Sgr dSph is roughly 10,000 light-years in diameter, and is currently about 70,000 light-years from Earth, travelling in a polar orbit (an orbit passing over the Milky Way's galactic poles) at a distance of about 50,000 light-years from the core of the Milky Way (about one third of the distance of the Large Magellanic Cloud). In its looping, spiraling path, it has passed through the plane of the Milky Way several times in the past.[9] In 2018 the Gaia project of the European Space Agency showed that Sgr dSph had caused perturbations in a set of stars near the Milky Way's core, causing unexpected rippling movements of the stars triggered when it moved past the Milky Way between 300 and 900 million years ago.[10]

Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy[1]
The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy in Aitoff allsky view
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
ConstellationSagittarius
Right ascension18h 55m 19.5s[2]
Declination−30° 32′ 43″[2]
Redshift140 ± ? km/s[2]
Distance65 ± 7 kly (20 ± 2 kpc)[3][4]
Apparent magnitude (V)4.5[2]
Characteristics
TypedSph(t)[2]
Mass4×108[5] M
Apparent size (V)450.0′ × 216.0′[2]
Notable featuresHeading for a collision
with the Milky Way
Other designations
Sag DEG,[6] Sgr dSph,[2] Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal,[2] Sgr I Dwarf,[2] PGC 4689212[7]

Features Edit

Officially discovered in 1994, by Rodrigo Ibata, Mike Irwin, and Gerry Gilmore,[11] Sgr dSph was immediately recognized as being the nearest known neighbor to the Milky Way at the time. (The disputed Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy, discovered in 2003, might be the actual nearest neighbor.) Although it is one of the closest companion galaxies to the Milky Way, the main parent cluster is on the opposite side of the Galactic Center from Earth, and consequently is very faint, although covering a large area of the sky. Sgr dSph appears to be an older galaxy with little interstellar dust, composed largely of Population II stars, older and metal-poor, as compared to the Milky Way. No neutral hydrogen gas related to Sgr dSph has been found.[12]

Further discoveries by astrophysics teams from both the University of Virginia and the University of Massachusetts Amherst, drawing upon the 2MASS Two-Micron All Sky Infrared Survey data, revealed the entire loop-shaped structure. In 2003 with the aid of infrared telescopes and super computers, Steven Majewski, Michael Skrutskie, and Martin Weinberg were able to help create a new star map, picking out the full Sagittarius Dwarf presence, position, and looping shape from the mass of background stars and finding this smaller galaxy to be at a near right angle to the plane of the Milky Way.[13]

Globular clusters Edit

 
Messier 54, believed to be at the core of Sgr dSph. Greyscale image created from the HST's Advanced Camera for Surveys
 
Palomar 12, believed to have been captured from the Sgr dSph about 1.7 Gya

Sgr dSph has at least nine known globular clusters. One, M 54, appears to reside at its core, while three others reside within the main body of the galaxy: Terzan 7, Terzan 8 and Arp 2.[14] Additionally, Palomar 12,[15][16] Whiting 1,[17][18] NGC 2419, NGC 4147, and NGC 5634 are found within its extended stellar streams.[8] However, this is an unusually low number of globular clusters, and an analysis of VVV and Gaia EDR3 data has found at least twenty more.[8][19] The newly discovered globular clusters tend to be more metal-rich than previously known globular clusters.[19]

Metallicity Edit

Sgr dSph has multiple stellar populations, ranging in age from the oldest globular clusters (almost as old as the universe itself) to trace populations as young as several hundred million years (mya). It also exhibits an age-metallicity relationship, in that its old populations are metal poor ([Fe/H] = −1.6 ± 0.1) while its youngest populations have super-solar abundances.[18][20]

Geometry and dynamics Edit

Based on its current trajectory, the Sgr dSph main cluster is about to pass through the galactic disc of the Milky Way within the next hundred million years, while the extended loop-shaped ellipse is already extended around and through our local space and on through the Milky Way galactic disc, and in the process of slowly being absorbed into the larger galaxy, calculated at 10,000 times the mass of Sgr dSph. The dissipation of the Sgr dSph main cluster and its merger with the Milky Way stream is expected to be complete within a billion years from now.[5]

At first, many astronomers thought that Sgr dSph had already reached an advanced state of destruction, so that a large part of its original matter was already mixed with that of the Milky Way. However, Sgr dSph still has coherence as a dispersed elongated ellipse, and appears to move in a roughly polar orbit around the Milky Way as close as 50,000 light-years from the galactic core. Although it may have begun as a spherical object before falling towards the Milky Way, Sgr dSph is now being torn apart by immense tidal forces over hundreds of millions of years. Numerical simulations suggest that stars ripped out from the dwarf would be spread out in a long stellar stream along its path, which were subsequently detected.

However, some astronomers contend that Sgr dSph has been in orbit around the Milky Way for some billions of years, and has already orbited it approximately ten times. Its ability to retain some coherence despite such strains would indicate an unusually high concentration of dark matter within that galaxy.

In 1999, Johnston et al. concluded that Sgr dSph has orbited the Milky Way for at least one gigayear and that during that time its mass has decreased by a factor of two or three. Its orbit is found to have galactocentric distances that oscillate between ≈13 and ≈41 kpc with a period of 550 to 750 million years. The last perigalacticon was approximately fifty million years ago. Also in 1999, Jiang & Binney found that it may have started its infall into the Milky Way at a point more than 200 kpc away if its starting mass was as large as ≈1011M.

The models of both its orbit and the Milky Way's potential field could be improved by proper motion observations of Sgr dSph's stellar debris. This issue is under intense investigation, with computational support by the MilkyWay@Home project.

A simulation published in 2011 suggested that the Milky Way may have obtained its spiral structure as a result of repeated collisions with Sgr dSph.[9]

In 2018, the Gaia project of the European Space Agency, designed primarily to investigate the origin, evolution and structure of the Milky Way, delivered the largest and most precise census of positions, velocities and other stellar properties of more than a billion stars, which showed that Sgr dSph had caused perturbations in a set of stars near the Milky Way's core, causing unexpected rippling movements of the stars triggered when it sailed past the Milky Way between 300 and 900 million years ago.[10]

A 2019 study by TCU Graduate Student Matthew Melendez and co-authors concluded that Sgr dSph had a decreasing metallicity trend as a function of radius, with a larger spread in metallicity in the core relative to the outer regions. Also, they did find evidence for the first time for two distinct populations in alpha abundances as a function of metallicity.[21][22]

A 2020 study concluded that collisions between the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy and the Milky Way triggered major episodes of star formation in the latter, based on data taken from the Gaia project.[23]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Name SDG". SIMBAD. Centre de données astronomiques de Strasbourg. Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Saggitarius Dwarf Spheroidal". NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database. Retrieved 28 November 2006.
  3. ^ Karachentsev, I. D.; Karachentseva, V. E.; Hutchmeier, W. K.; Makarov, D. I. (2004). "A Catalog of Neighboring Galaxies". The Astronomical Journal. 127 (4): 2031–2068. Bibcode:2004AJ....127.2031K. doi:10.1086/382905.
  4. ^ Karachentsev, I. D.; Kashibadze, O. G. (2006). "Masses of the local group and of the M81 group estimated from distortions in the local velocity field". Astrophysics. 49 (1): 3–18. Bibcode:2006Ap.....49....3K. doi:10.1007/s10511-006-0002-6. S2CID 120973010.
  5. ^ a b Vasiliev, Eugene; Belokurov, Vasily (2020). "The last breath of the Sagittarius d SPH". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 497 (4): 4162–4182. arXiv:2006.02929. doi:10.1093/mnras/staa2114.
  6. ^ Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy / Sag DEG
  7. ^ eSky:Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy
  8. ^ a b c Minniti, D.; Ripepi, V.; Fernández-Trincado, J. G.; Alonso-García, J.; Smith, L. C.; Lucas, P. W.; Gómez, M.; Pullen, J. B.; Garro, E. R.; Vivanco Cádiz, F.; Hempel, M.; Rejkuba, M.; Saito, R. K.; Palma, T.; Clariá, J. J.; Gregg, M.; Majaess, D. (2021). "Discovery of new globular clusters in the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 647: L4. arXiv:2103.08196. Bibcode:2021A&A...647L...4M. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202140395. hdl:2299/24198. S2CID 232232874.
  9. ^ a b "Star-Crossed: Milky Way's spiral shape may result from a smaller galaxy's impact". Scientific American. 15 December 2016. Archived from the original on 15 December 2016.
  10. ^ a b Antoja, T.; Helmi, A.; Romero-Gómez, M.; Katz, D.; Babusiaux, C.; Drimmel, R.; Evans, D. W.; Figueras, F.; Poggio, E.; Reylé, C.; Robin, A. C.; Seabroke, G.; Soubiran, C. (19 September 2018). "A dynamically young and perturbed Milky Way disk". Nature. 561 (7723): 360–362. arXiv:1804.10196. Bibcode:2018Natur.561..360A. doi:10.1038/s41586-018-0510-7. PMID 30232428. S2CID 52298687.
  11. ^ Ibata, R.A.; Gilmore, G.; Irwin, M.J. (1994). "A dwarf satellite galaxy in Sagittarius". Nature. 370 (6486): 194. Bibcode:1994Natur.370..194I. doi:10.1038/370194a0. S2CID 4335789.
  12. ^ van den Bergh, Sidney (April 2000). "Updated Information on the Local Group". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 112 (770): 529–536. arXiv:astro-ph/0001040. Bibcode:2000PASP..112..529V. doi:10.1086/316548. S2CID 1805423.
  13. ^ Sagittarius – big (image). University of Virginia.
  14. ^ Sbordone, L.; Bonifacio, P.; Marconi, G.; Buonanno, R.; Zaggia, S. (3 July 2005). "Family ties: Abundances in Terzan 7, a Sgr dSph globular cluster". Astronomy and Astrophysics. 437 (3): 905–910. arXiv:astro-ph/0505307. Bibcode:2005A&A...437..905S. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20042315. S2CID 11063189.
  15. ^ Cohen, Judith G. (2004). "Palomar 12 as a part of the Sagittarius stream: The evidence from abundance ratios". The Astronomical Journal. 127 (3): 1545–1554. arXiv:astro-ph/0311187. Bibcode:2004AJ....127.1545C. doi:10.1086/382104. S2CID 14166091.
  16. ^ Sbordone; et al. (5 December 2006). "The exotic chemical composition of the Sagittarius dwarf Spheroidal galaxy". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 465 (3): 815–824. arXiv:astro-ph/0612125. Bibcode:2007yCat..34650815S. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20066385. S2CID 18468104.
  17. ^ Carraro, Giovanni; Zinn, Robert; Bidin, Christian Moni (9 February 2007). "Whiting 1: the youngest globular cluster associated with the Sgr dSph". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 466: 181–189. arXiv:astro-ph/0702253. Bibcode:2007yCat..34660181C. doi:10.1051/0004-6361:20066825. S2CID 55029429.
  18. ^ a b Geisler, Doug; Wallerstein, George; Smith, Verne V.; Casetti-Dinescu, Dana I. (September 2007). "Chemical Abundances and Kinematics in Globular Clusters and Local Group Dwarf Galaxies and Their Implications for Formation Theories of the Galactic Halo". Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. 119 (859): 939–961. arXiv:0708.0570. Bibcode:2007PASP..119..939G. doi:10.1086/521990. S2CID 119599242.
  19. ^ a b Minniti, D.; Gómez, M.; Alonso-García, J.; Saito, R. K.; Garro, E. R. (2021). "Eight more low luminosity globular clusters in the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 650: L12. arXiv:2106.03605. Bibcode:2021A&A...650L..12M. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202140714. S2CID 235358598.
  20. ^ Siegel, Michael H.; Dotter, Aaron; Majewski, Steven R.; Sarajedini, Ata; Chaboyer, Brian; Nidever, David L.; Anderson, Jay; Marín-Franch, Antonio; Rosenberg, Alfred; et al. (September 2007). "The ACS Survey of Galactic Globular Clusters: M54 and Young Populations in the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy". Astrophysical Journal Letters. 667 (1): 57–60. arXiv:0708.0027. Bibcode:2007ApJ...667L..57S. doi:10.1086/522003. S2CID 119626792.
  21. ^ Melendez, Matthew; Frinchaboy, Peter M.; Donor, John; Ray, Amy. "Using The Cannon to study the chemistry of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy" (PDF).
  22. ^ "Matthew Melendez explores a small galaxy that is falling into our own". TCU Astronomy and Physics. April 13, 2019. Archived from the original on 2021-12-12 – via YouTube.
  23. ^ Ruiz-Lara, Tomás; Gallart, Carme; Bernard, Edouard J.; Cassisi, Santi (2020). "The recurrent impact of the Sagittarius dwarf on the star formation history of the Milky Way". Nature Astronomy. 4 (10): 965–973. arXiv:2003.12577. Bibcode:2020NatAs...4..965R. doi:10.1038/s41550-020-1097-0. S2CID 219521194.

External links Edit

  • "SagDEG". SEDS.
  • "SagDEG". solstation.com.
  • Simulation showing Sgr dSph impacts causing spiral arms of Milky Way (video). Archived from the original on 2021-12-12 – via YouTube.com.
  • Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy at the SIMBAD Astronomical Database.
  • Ids - Bibliography - Image - B&W Image.

sagittarius, dwarf, spheroidal, galaxy, confused, with, sagittarius, dwarf, irregular, galaxy, dsph, also, known, sagittarius, dwarf, elliptical, galaxy, elliptical, loop, shaped, satellite, galaxy, milky, contains, four, globular, clusters, main, body, with, . Not to be confused with Sagittarius Dwarf Irregular Galaxy The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy Sgr dSph also known as the Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy Sgr dE or Sag DEG is an elliptical loop shaped satellite galaxy of the Milky Way It contains four globular clusters in its main body 8 with the brightest of them NGC 6715 M54 being known well before the discovery of the galaxy itself in 1994 Sgr dSph is roughly 10 000 light years in diameter and is currently about 70 000 light years from Earth travelling in a polar orbit an orbit passing over the Milky Way s galactic poles at a distance of about 50 000 light years from the core of the Milky Way about one third of the distance of the Large Magellanic Cloud In its looping spiraling path it has passed through the plane of the Milky Way several times in the past 9 In 2018 the Gaia project of the European Space Agency showed that Sgr dSph had caused perturbations in a set of stars near the Milky Way s core causing unexpected rippling movements of the stars triggered when it moved past the Milky Way between 300 and 900 million years ago 10 Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy 1 The Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy in Aitoff allsky viewObservation data J2000 epoch ConstellationSagittariusRight ascension18h 55m 19 5s 2 Declination 30 32 43 2 Redshift140 km s 2 Distance65 7 kly 20 2 kpc 3 4 Apparent magnitude V 4 5 2 CharacteristicsTypedSph t 2 Mass4 108 5 M Apparent size V 450 0 216 0 2 Notable featuresHeading for a collisionwith the Milky WayOther designationsSag DEG 6 Sgr dSph 2 Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal 2 Sgr I Dwarf 2 PGC 4689212 7 Contents 1 Features 1 1 Globular clusters 1 2 Metallicity 2 Geometry and dynamics 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksFeatures EditOfficially discovered in 1994 by Rodrigo Ibata Mike Irwin and Gerry Gilmore 11 Sgr dSph was immediately recognized as being the nearest known neighbor to the Milky Way at the time The disputed Canis Major Dwarf Galaxy discovered in 2003 might be the actual nearest neighbor Although it is one of the closest companion galaxies to the Milky Way the main parent cluster is on the opposite side of the Galactic Center from Earth and consequently is very faint although covering a large area of the sky Sgr dSph appears to be an older galaxy with little interstellar dust composed largely of Population II stars older and metal poor as compared to the Milky Way No neutral hydrogen gas related to Sgr dSph has been found 12 Further discoveries by astrophysics teams from both the University of Virginia and the University of Massachusetts Amherst drawing upon the 2MASS Two Micron All Sky Infrared Survey data revealed the entire loop shaped structure In 2003 with the aid of infrared telescopes and super computers Steven Majewski Michael Skrutskie and Martin Weinberg were able to help create a new star map picking out the full Sagittarius Dwarf presence position and looping shape from the mass of background stars and finding this smaller galaxy to be at a near right angle to the plane of the Milky Way 13 Globular clusters Edit nbsp Messier 54 believed to be at the core of Sgr dSph Greyscale image created from the HST s Advanced Camera for Surveys nbsp Palomar 12 believed to have been captured from the Sgr dSph about 1 7 GyaSgr dSph has at least nine known globular clusters One M 54 appears to reside at its core while three others reside within the main body of the galaxy Terzan 7 Terzan 8 and Arp 2 14 Additionally Palomar 12 15 16 Whiting 1 17 18 NGC 2419 NGC 4147 and NGC 5634 are found within its extended stellar streams 8 However this is an unusually low number of globular clusters and an analysis of VVV and Gaia EDR3 data has found at least twenty more 8 19 The newly discovered globular clusters tend to be more metal rich than previously known globular clusters 19 Metallicity Edit Sgr dSph has multiple stellar populations ranging in age from the oldest globular clusters almost as old as the universe itself to trace populations as young as several hundred million years mya It also exhibits an age metallicity relationship in that its old populations are metal poor Fe H 1 6 0 1 while its youngest populations have super solar abundances 18 20 Geometry and dynamics EditBased on its current trajectory the Sgr dSph main cluster is about to pass through the galactic disc of the Milky Way within the next hundred million years while the extended loop shaped ellipse is already extended around and through our local space and on through the Milky Way galactic disc and in the process of slowly being absorbed into the larger galaxy calculated at 10 000 times the mass of Sgr dSph The dissipation of the Sgr dSph main cluster and its merger with the Milky Way stream is expected to be complete within a billion years from now 5 At first many astronomers thought that Sgr dSph had already reached an advanced state of destruction so that a large part of its original matter was already mixed with that of the Milky Way However Sgr dSph still has coherence as a dispersed elongated ellipse and appears to move in a roughly polar orbit around the Milky Way as close as 50 000 light years from the galactic core Although it may have begun as a spherical object before falling towards the Milky Way Sgr dSph is now being torn apart by immense tidal forces over hundreds of millions of years Numerical simulations suggest that stars ripped out from the dwarf would be spread out in a long stellar stream along its path which were subsequently detected However some astronomers contend that Sgr dSph has been in orbit around the Milky Way for some billions of years and has already orbited it approximately ten times Its ability to retain some coherence despite such strains would indicate an unusually high concentration of dark matter within that galaxy In 1999 Johnston et al concluded that Sgr dSph has orbited the Milky Way for at least one gigayear and that during that time its mass has decreased by a factor of two or three Its orbit is found to have galactocentric distances that oscillate between 13 and 41 kpc with a period of 550 to 750 million years The last perigalacticon was approximately fifty million years ago Also in 1999 Jiang amp Binney found that it may have started its infall into the Milky Way at a point more than 200 kpc away if its starting mass was as large as 1011M The models of both its orbit and the Milky Way s potential field could be improved by proper motion observations of Sgr dSph s stellar debris This issue is under intense investigation with computational support by the MilkyWay Home project A simulation published in 2011 suggested that the Milky Way may have obtained its spiral structure as a result of repeated collisions with Sgr dSph 9 In 2018 the Gaia project of the European Space Agency designed primarily to investigate the origin evolution and structure of the Milky Way delivered the largest and most precise census of positions velocities and other stellar properties of more than a billion stars which showed that Sgr dSph had caused perturbations in a set of stars near the Milky Way s core causing unexpected rippling movements of the stars triggered when it sailed past the Milky Way between 300 and 900 million years ago 10 A 2019 study by TCU Graduate Student Matthew Melendez and co authors concluded that Sgr dSph had a decreasing metallicity trend as a function of radius with a larger spread in metallicity in the core relative to the outer regions Also they did find evidence for the first time for two distinct populations in alpha abundances as a function of metallicity 21 22 A 2020 study concluded that collisions between the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy and the Milky Way triggered major episodes of star formation in the latter based on data taken from the Gaia project 23 See also EditMessier 54 Omega CentauriReferences Edit Name SDG SIMBAD Centre de donnees astronomiques de Strasbourg Retrieved 28 November 2006 a b c d e f g h i Saggitarius Dwarf Spheroidal NASA IPAC Extragalactic Database Retrieved 28 November 2006 Karachentsev I D Karachentseva V E Hutchmeier W K Makarov D I 2004 A Catalog of Neighboring Galaxies The Astronomical Journal 127 4 2031 2068 Bibcode 2004AJ 127 2031K doi 10 1086 382905 Karachentsev I D Kashibadze O G 2006 Masses of the local group and of the M81 group estimated from distortions in the local velocity field Astrophysics 49 1 3 18 Bibcode 2006Ap 49 3K doi 10 1007 s10511 006 0002 6 S2CID 120973010 a b Vasiliev Eugene Belokurov Vasily 2020 The last breath of the Sagittarius d SPH Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 497 4 4162 4182 arXiv 2006 02929 doi 10 1093 mnras staa2114 Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy Sag DEG eSky Sagittarius Dwarf Galaxy a b c Minniti D Ripepi V Fernandez Trincado J G Alonso Garcia J Smith L C Lucas P W Gomez M Pullen J B Garro E R Vivanco Cadiz F Hempel M Rejkuba M Saito R K Palma T Claria J J Gregg M Majaess D 2021 Discovery of new globular clusters in the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy Astronomy amp Astrophysics 647 L4 arXiv 2103 08196 Bibcode 2021A amp A 647L 4M doi 10 1051 0004 6361 202140395 hdl 2299 24198 S2CID 232232874 a b Star Crossed Milky Way s spiral shape may result from a smaller galaxy s impact Scientific American 15 December 2016 Archived from the original on 15 December 2016 a b Antoja T Helmi A Romero Gomez M Katz D Babusiaux C Drimmel R Evans D W Figueras F Poggio E Reyle C Robin A C Seabroke G Soubiran C 19 September 2018 A dynamically young and perturbed Milky Way disk Nature 561 7723 360 362 arXiv 1804 10196 Bibcode 2018Natur 561 360A doi 10 1038 s41586 018 0510 7 PMID 30232428 S2CID 52298687 Ibata R A Gilmore G Irwin M J 1994 A dwarf satellite galaxy in Sagittarius Nature 370 6486 194 Bibcode 1994Natur 370 194I doi 10 1038 370194a0 S2CID 4335789 van den Bergh Sidney April 2000 Updated Information on the Local Group Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 112 770 529 536 arXiv astro ph 0001040 Bibcode 2000PASP 112 529V doi 10 1086 316548 S2CID 1805423 Sagittarius big image University of Virginia Sbordone L Bonifacio P Marconi G Buonanno R Zaggia S 3 July 2005 Family ties Abundances in Terzan 7 a Sgr dSph globular cluster Astronomy and Astrophysics 437 3 905 910 arXiv astro ph 0505307 Bibcode 2005A amp A 437 905S doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20042315 S2CID 11063189 Cohen Judith G 2004 Palomar 12 as a part of the Sagittarius stream The evidence from abundance ratios The Astronomical Journal 127 3 1545 1554 arXiv astro ph 0311187 Bibcode 2004AJ 127 1545C doi 10 1086 382104 S2CID 14166091 Sbordone et al 5 December 2006 The exotic chemical composition of the Sagittarius dwarf Spheroidal galaxy Astronomy amp Astrophysics 465 3 815 824 arXiv astro ph 0612125 Bibcode 2007yCat 34650815S doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20066385 S2CID 18468104 Carraro Giovanni Zinn Robert Bidin Christian Moni 9 February 2007 Whiting 1 the youngest globular cluster associated with the Sgr dSph Astronomy amp Astrophysics 466 181 189 arXiv astro ph 0702253 Bibcode 2007yCat 34660181C doi 10 1051 0004 6361 20066825 S2CID 55029429 a b Geisler Doug Wallerstein George Smith Verne V Casetti Dinescu Dana I September 2007 Chemical Abundances and Kinematics in Globular Clusters and Local Group Dwarf Galaxies and Their Implications for Formation Theories of the Galactic Halo Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 119 859 939 961 arXiv 0708 0570 Bibcode 2007PASP 119 939G doi 10 1086 521990 S2CID 119599242 a b Minniti D Gomez M Alonso Garcia J Saito R K Garro E R 2021 Eight more low luminosity globular clusters in the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy Astronomy amp Astrophysics 650 L12 arXiv 2106 03605 Bibcode 2021A amp A 650L 12M doi 10 1051 0004 6361 202140714 S2CID 235358598 Siegel Michael H Dotter Aaron Majewski Steven R Sarajedini Ata Chaboyer Brian Nidever David L Anderson Jay Marin Franch Antonio Rosenberg Alfred et al September 2007 The ACS Survey of Galactic Globular Clusters M54 and Young Populations in the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy Astrophysical Journal Letters 667 1 57 60 arXiv 0708 0027 Bibcode 2007ApJ 667L 57S doi 10 1086 522003 S2CID 119626792 Melendez Matthew Frinchaboy Peter M Donor John Ray Amy Using The Cannon to study the chemistry of the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy PDF Matthew Melendez explores a small galaxy that is falling into our own TCU Astronomy and Physics April 13 2019 Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 via YouTube Ruiz Lara Tomas Gallart Carme Bernard Edouard J Cassisi Santi 2020 The recurrent impact of the Sagittarius dwarf on the star formation history of the Milky Way Nature Astronomy 4 10 965 973 arXiv 2003 12577 Bibcode 2020NatAs 4 965R doi 10 1038 s41550 020 1097 0 S2CID 219521194 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy SagDEG SEDS SagDEG solstation com Simulation showing Sgr dSph impacts causing spiral arms of Milky Way video Archived from the original on 2021 12 12 via YouTube com Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy at the SIMBAD Astronomical Database Ids Bibliography Image B amp W Image Portals nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy amp oldid 1178591602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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