We present deep imaging of the most distant dwarf discovered by the Dark
Energy Survey, Eridanus II (Eri II). Our Magellan/Megacam stellar photometry
reaches ∼3 mag deeper than previous work, and allows us to confirm the
presence of a stellar cluster whose position is consistent with Eri II's
center. This makes Eri II, at MV=−7.1, the least luminous galaxy known to
host a (possibly central) cluster. The cluster is partially resolved, and at
MV=−3.5 it accounts for ∼4% of Eri II's luminosity. We derive
updated structural parameters for Eri II, which has a half-light radius of
∼280 pc and is elongated (ϵ∼0.48), at a measured
distance of D∼370 kpc. The color-magnitude diagram displays a blue,
extended horizontal branch, as well as a less populated red horizontal branch.
A central concentration of stars brighter than the old main sequence turnoff
hints at a possible intermediate-age (∼3 Gyr) population; alternatively,
these sources could be blue straggler stars. A deep Green Bank Telescope
observation of Eri II reveals no associated atomic gas.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; ApJL accepte