Nuclear activity in galaxy pairs: a spectroscopic analysis of 48 UZC-BGPs
Paola Focardi, Valentina Zitelli, Silvia Marinoni

TL;DR
This spectroscopic study of 48 galaxy pairs reveals high emission line activity, prevalent nuclear starbursts, and active galactic nuclei, indicating interactions influence nuclear activity across various galaxy types and separations.
Contribution
First comprehensive spectroscopic analysis of nuclear activity in a large, homogeneous sample of galaxy pairs, highlighting interaction effects on different nuclear phenomena.
Findings
High fraction of emission line galaxies, especially in spirals.
Starburst activity is most common, with AGNs also prevalent.
Interaction effects are observed up to 160 h^{-1} kpc separations.
Abstract
Galaxy pairs are ideal sites in which to investigate the role of interaction on nuclear activity. For this reason we have undertaken a spectroscopic survey of a large homogeneous sample of galaxy pairs (UZC-BGP) and we present the results of the nuclear spectral classification of 48 pairs (more than half of the whole sample). The fraction of emission line galaxies is extremely large, especially among spirals (84 % and 95 %, for early and late spirals respectively). SB is the most frequent type of nuclear activity encountered (30 % of galaxies) while AGNs are only 19%. The fractions raise to 45 % and 22 % when considering only spirals. Late spirals are characterized by both an unusual increase (35 %) of AGN activity and high luminosity (44 % have M_B <-20.0 + 5log h). LLAGNs are only 8% of the total number of galaxies, but this activity could be present in another 10 % of the galaxies…
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