Resolving the mystery of the dwarf galaxy HIZSS003

Abstract
The nearby galaxy HIZSS003 was recently discovered during a blind HI survey of the zone of avoidance (Henning et al. 2000). Follow up VLA as well as optical and near-IR imaging and spectroscopy (Massey et al. 2003; Silva et al. 2005) confirm that it is a low metallicity dwarf irregular galaxy. However there were two puzzling aspects of the observations, (i) current star formation, as traced by H$\alpha$ emission, is confined to a small region at the edge of the VLA HI image and (ii) the metallicity of the older RGB stars is higher than that of the gas in HII region. We present high spatial and velocity resolution Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT) observations that resolve these puzzles by showing that HIZSS003 is actually a galaxy pair and that the HII region lies at the center of a much smaller companion galaxy (HIZSS003B) to the main galaxy (HIZSS003A). The HI emission from these two galaxies overlaps in projection, but can be separated in velocity space. HIZSS003B has an HI mass of 2.6 X 10^6 M$_\odot$, and a highly disturbed velocity field. Since the velocity field is disturbed, an accurate rotation curve cannot be derived, however, the indicative dynamical mass is ~5 X 10^7 M$_\odot$. For the bigger galaxy HIZSS003A we derive an HI mass of 1.4 X 10^7 M$_\odot$. The velocity field of this galaxy is quite regular and from its rotation curve we derive a total dynamical mass of ~6.5 X 10^8 M$_\odot$.

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