Low radio frequency signatures of ram pressure stripping in Virgo spiral NGC 4254
N. G. Kantharia, A. Pramesh Rao, S. K. Sirothia (National Centre for, Radio Astrophysics, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Pune, India)

TL;DR
This study detects extended low-frequency radio emission in NGC 4254, indicating ram pressure stripping effects as the galaxy interacts with the Virgo cluster environment, supported by spectral and polarization data.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed low-frequency radio evidence of ram pressure stripping in a face-on galaxy, linking extended emission and spectral steepening to environmental interactions.
Findings
Extended low-frequency emission beyond the optical disk.
Spectral index steepening indicating stripped gas.
Polarization and HI data support ram pressure effects.
Abstract
We report the detection of extended low radio frequency continuum emission beyond the optical disk of the spiral galaxy NGC 4254 using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope. NGC 4254, which has an almost face-on orientation, is located in the outskirts of the Virgo cluster. Since such extended emission is uncommon in low inclination galaxies, we believe it is a signature of magnetised plasma pushed out of the disk by ram pressure of the intracluster medium as NGC 4254 falls into the Virgo cluster. The detailed spectral index distribution across NGC 4254 shows that the steepest spectrum alpha < -1 (S propto nu^{alpha}) arises in the gas beyond the optical disk. This lends support to the ram pressure scenario by indicating that the extended emission is not from the disk gas but from matter which has been stripped by ram pressure. The steeper spectrum of the extended emission is reminiscent…
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