A GMOS/IFU Study of Jellyfish Galaxies in Massive Clusters

arxiv(2022)

引用 1|浏览11
暂无评分
摘要
Jellyfish galaxies are an intriguing snapshot of galaxies undergoing ram-pressure stripping (RPS) in dense environments, showing spectacular star-forming knots in their disks and tails. We study the ionized gas properties of five jellyfish galaxies in massive clusters with Gemini GMOS/IFU observations: MACSJ0916-JFG1 ($z=0.330$), MACSJ1752-JFG2 ($z=0.353$), A2744-F0083 ($z=0.303$), MACSJ1258-JFG1 ($z=0.342$), and MACSJ1720-JFG1 ($z=0.383$). BPT diagrams show that various mechanisms (star formation, AGN, or mixed effects) are ionizing gas in these galaxies. Radial velocity distributions of ionized gas seem to follow disk rotation of galaxies, with the appearance of a few high-velocity components in the tails as a sign of RPS. Mean gas velocity dispersion is lower than 50 \kms~in most star-forming regions except near AGNs or shock-heated regions, indicating that the ionized gas %in these star-forming regions is dynamically cold. Integrated star formation rates (SFRs) of these galaxies range from $7~{\rm M_{\odot}~{\rm yr^{-1}}}$ to $35~{\rm M_{\odot}~{\rm yr^{-1}}}$ and the tail SFRs are from $0.6~{\rm M_{\odot}~{\rm yr^{-1}}}$ to $16~{\rm M_{\odot}~{\rm yr^{-1}}}$, which are much higher than those of other jellyfish galaxies in the local universe. These high SFR values imply that RPS triggers intense star formation activity in these extreme jellyfish galaxies. The phase-space diagrams demonstrate that the jellyfish galaxies with higher stellar masses and higher host cluster velocity dispersion are likely to have more enhanced star formation activity. The jellyfish galaxies in this study have similar gas kinematics and dynamical states to those in the local universe, but they show a much higher SFR.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要