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            ABSTRACT Recent studies of ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs) have shown their globular cluster (GC) systems to be central in unveiling their remarkable properties and halo masses. Deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging revealed 54 GC candidates around the UDG NGC5846_UDG1 (UDG1), with a remarkable 13 per cent of the stellar light contained in the GC system. We present a kinematic analysis of UDG1’s GC system from observations with the integral field spectrograph Keck Cosmic Web Imager on the Keck II telescope. We measure recessional velocities for 19 GCs, confirming them as members of UDG1, giving a total of 20 confirmed GCs when combined with literature. Approximately, 9 per cent of the stellar light are contained just in the confirmed GCs. We determine the GC system’s velocity dispersion to be $$\sigma _{\rm GC}$$ = 29.8$$^{+6.4}_{-4.9}$$ km s$$^{-1}$$. We find that $$\sigma _{\rm GC}$$ increases with increasing magnitude, consistent with predictions for a GC system that evolved under the influence of dynamical friction. The GC system velocity dispersion is constant out to $${\sim} 1R_{\rm eff}$$. Using $$\sigma _{\rm GC}$$, we calculate $$M_{\rm dyn}$$ = $$2.09^{+1.00}_{-0.64}\times 10^{9}$$ M$$_{\odot }$$ as the dynamical mass enclosed within $$\sim$$2.5 kpc. The dark matter halo mass suggested by the GC number–halo mass relationship agrees with our dynamical mass estimate, implying a halo more massive than suggested by common stellar mass–halo mass relationships. UDG1, being GC-rich with a massive halo, fits the picture of a failed galaxy.more » « less
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            Abstract NGC 1052-DF2 and -DF4 are two ultradiffuse galaxies that have been reported as deficient in dark matter and associated with the same galaxy group. Recent findings suggest that DF2 and DF4 are part of a large linear substructure of dwarf galaxies that could have been formed from a high-velocity head-on encounter of two gas-rich galaxies, known as a “bullet dwarf” collision. Based on new observations from the Hubble Space Telescope, combined with existing imaging from theuband to mid-infrared, we test the bullet dwarf scenario by studying the morphologies and stellar populations of the trail dwarfs. We find no significant morphological differences between the trail dwarfs and other dwarfs in the group, while for both populations, their photometric major axes unexpectedly align parallel with the trail. We find that the trail dwarfs have significantly older ages and higher metallicities than the comparison sample, supporting the distinctiveness of the trail. These observations provide key constraints for any formation model, and we argue that they are currently best explained by the bullet dwarf collision scenario, with additional strong tests anticipated with future observations.more » « less
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            We present spatially resolved Keck Cosmic Web Imager stellar spectroscopy of the Virgo cluster dwarf galaxies VCC 9 and VCC 1448. These galaxies have similar stellar masses and large half-light radii but very different globular cluster (GC) system richness (∼25 versus ∼99 GCs). Using the KCWI data, we spectroscopically confirm 10 GCs associated with VCC 1448 and one GC associated with VCC 9. We make two measurements of dynamical mass for VCC 1448 based on the stellar and GC velocities, respectively. VCC 1448’s mass measurements suggest that it resides in a halo in better agreement with the expectation of the stellar mass–halo mass relationship than the expectation from its large GC counts. For VCC 9, the dynamical mass we measure agrees with the expected halo mass from both relationships. We compare VCC 1448 and VCC 9 to the GC-rich galaxy Dragonfly 44 (∼74 GCs), which is similar in size but has ∼1 dex less stellar mass than either Virgo galaxy. In dynamical mass – GC number space, Dragonfly 44 and VCC 1448 exhibit richer GC systems given their dynamical mass than that of VCC 9 and other ‘normal’ galaxies. We also place the galaxies in kinematics–ellipticity space finding evidence of an anticorrelation between rotational support and the fraction of a galaxy’s stellar mass in its GC system, that is, VCC 9 is more rotationally supported than VCC 1448, which is more rotationally supported than Dragonfly 44. This trend may be expected if a galaxy’s GC content depends on its natal gas properties at formation.more » « less
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            Abstract We identify a ∼600 pc wide region of active star formation located within a tidal streamer of M82 via Hαemission (FHα∼ 6.5 × 10−14erg s−1cm−2), using a pathfinder instrument based on the Dragonfly Telephoto Array. The object is kinematically decoupled from the disk of M82 as confirmed via Keck/LRIS spectroscopy and is spatially and kinematically coincident with an overdensity of Hiand molecular hydrogen within the “northern Histreamer” induced by the passage of M81 several hundred Myr ago. From Hidata, we estimate that ∼5 × 107M⊙of gas is present in the specific overdensity coincident with the Hαsource. The object’s derived metallicity (12+ ), position within a gas-rich tidal feature, and morphology (600 pc diameter with multiple star-forming clumps), indicate that it is likely a tidal dwarf galaxy in the earliest stages of formation.more » « less
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