'Ursa Major Dwarf' (''UMa dSph'') is a
dwarf spheroidal galaxy orbiting the
Milky Way galaxy. The discovery by
Beth Willman et al. was announced in
2005.
Being a small
dwarf galaxy, it measures only a few thousand
light-years in diameter. As of
2006, it is the second least luminous galaxy known (discounting
dark galaxies such as
VIRGOHI21 in the
Virgo cluster of galaxies), to the
Boötes Dwarf (absolute magnitude -5.7). The
absolute magnitude of the galaxy is only -6.75, meaning that it is less luminous than some
stars, like
Deneb in the Milky Way. It is comparable in luminosity to
Rigel. It was described to be similar to the
Sextans Dwarf Galaxy. Both galaxies are ancient and metal-deficient.
It is located at a distance of about 330,000
light-years from the Earth. That is about twice the distance to the
Large Magellanic Cloud, the largest and most luminous satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.
There was another object called ''Ursa Major Dwarf'', discovered by
Edwin Hubble in
1949. It was designated as
Palomar 4. Due to its peculiar look, it was temporary suspected to be either a dwarf spheroidal or
elliptical galaxy. However, it was later confirmed to be a very distant (about 360,000 ly)
globular cluster belonging to our galaxy.
Sources
★
The Milky Way's newest satellite Ken Croswell
★
Ursa Major Dwarf, Palomar 4
★ Willman, Dalcanton, Martinez-Delgado, et al. (2005) "''A New Milky Way Dwarf Galaxy in Ursa Major''", submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters, on arXiv.org:
astro-ph/0503552
External links
★
SIMBAD Ursa Major Dwarf
See also
★
Ursa Minor Dwarf
References