The Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy, SagDEG

Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy SagDEG (also Sagittarius dSph) in Sagittarius

[SagDEG, contour map]

Right Ascension 18 : 55.1 (h : m)
Declination -30:29 (deg : m)
Distance 80.0 (kly)
Apparent Dimension 190x490 (arc min)
In 1994, R. Ibata, M. Irwin, and G. Gilmore found this small Local Group galaxy by stellar brightness density investigations (see also e.g. the August 1994 issues of Astronomy or Sky & Telescope or the German Sterne und Weltraum). This galaxy was immediately recognized as being the nearest known neighbor to our Milky Way, significantly closer than the Large Magellanic Cloud which was considered to be our closest companion until than.

This dwarf galaxy is called SagDEG (for Sagittarius Dwarf Elliptical Galaxy), or sometimes Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy; don't confuse it with another member, SagDIG (Sag. Dwarf Irregular Galaxy). It is strongly recommended to avoid misleading designations such as "Sagittarius Dwarf" (which is an older designation for SagDIG), "Sagittarius I Dwarf", or similar ambiguous names for this galaxy, although they occasionally occur in websites, databases, articles and papers.

These are two minor galaxies in the same constellation Sagittarius, which are of different type: The difference between these types is that dwarf irregulars still have interstellar matter and/or young stars while the dwarf elliptical have only an old yellowish stellar population. From its stellar contents, it is resembling other low surface brightness members of the local group such as the Sculptor dwarf galaxy, but it is so highly obscured that it was hidden up to the 1994 investigation.

SagDEG is one of the most recently discovered members of the Local Group, and is currently in a very close encounter to our Milky Way galaxy. It is apparently in process of being disrupted by tidal gravitational forces of its big massive neighbor in this encounter. Nevertheless it is apparently big: 5x10 degrees in the sky.

Globular cluster M54 coincides with one of the galaxy's two bright knots, and is also receding at about the same velocity. It may also be at the same distance (about 80,000 light years), so probably M54 is the first extragalactic globular ever discovered (by Charles Messier in 1778). When SagDEG will be disrupted after the current encounter, M54 and the other at least three globulars of this dwarf (Arp 2, Terzan 7 and Terzan 8, which are all much fainter than M54) will be the "remnants", while the other stars will be spread over the galactic halo, or escape as intergalactic travelers. The globulars will perhaps be captured and find their place in the halo of the Milky Way galaxy.

In February 1998, a team of astronomers headed by Rosemary Wyse of John Hopkins University found that SagDEG orbits the Milky Way Galaxy in less than one billion years. Because it must have passed the dense central region of our Galaxy at least about ten times, it is surprising that the dwarf has not been disrupted for so far. Astronomers suspect that this fact is an indication for significant amounts of dark matter within this small galaxy, which ties the stars stronger to the galaxy by its gravity. We have their press release here, or you can read their original report online.

References:

  • SIMBAD data for SagDEG
  • NED data for SagDEG


    Hartmut Frommert (spider@seds.org)
    Christine Kronberg (smil@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)

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    Last Modification: 16 Feb 1998, 20:35 MET