Stochastic `Beads on a String' in the Accretion Tail of Arp 285
B. J. Smith (ETSU), C. Struck (Iowa State), M. Hancock (ETSU), M. L., Giroux (ETSU), P. N. Appleton (SSC), V. Charmandaris (Crete), W. Reach (SSC),, S. Hurlock (ETSU), and J.-S. Hwang (Iowa State)

TL;DR
This paper studies star formation 'beads on a string' in the interacting galaxy pair Arp 285 using multi-wavelength observations and a numerical model, revealing insights into their ages, origins, and the interaction dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of star-forming clumps and a new numerical model explaining their formation through galaxy interaction dynamics.
Findings
Star-forming clumps are very young (~4-20 Myrs) and less luminous than dwarf galaxies.
Star formation occurs in a pile-up of accreted material due to overshooting in the interaction.
The model suggests a ring-galaxy-like collision causes an expanding ripple-like feature.
Abstract
We present Spitzer infrared, GALEX UV, and SDSS and SARA optical images of the peculiar interacting galaxy pair Arp 285 (NGC 2856/4), and compare with a new numerical model of the interaction. We estimate the ages of clumps of star formation in these galaxies using population synthesis models, carefully considering the uncertainties on these ages. This system contains a striking example of `beads on a string': a series of star formation complexes ~1 kpc apart. These `beads' are found in a tail-like feature that is perpendicular to the disk of NGC 2856, which implies that it was formed from material accreted from the companion NGC 2854. The extreme blueness of the optical/UV colors and redness of the mid-infrared colors implies very young stellar ages (~4 - 20 Myrs) for these star forming regions. Spectral decomposition of these `beads' shows excess emission above the modeled stellar…
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