Galaxy Evolution in Hickson Compact Groups: The Role of Ram Pressure Stripping and Strangulation
Jesper Rasmussen (1), Trevor J. Ponman (2), Lourdes Verdes-Montenegro, (3), Min S. Yun (4), Sanchayeeta Borthakur (4) ((1) Carnegie Observatories,, (2) U. Birmingham, (3) IAA-CSIC, (4) UMass Amherst)

TL;DR
This study investigates the impact of hot intragroup medium and other processes on HI deficiency in Hickson compact groups, finding ram pressure and strangulation may contribute but are not solely responsible.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed X-ray analysis of HI deficient Hickson groups and assesses the roles of ram pressure stripping, strangulation, and tidal interactions.
Findings
Diffuse X-ray emission detected in 4 groups, indicating some IGM presence.
Ram pressure and viscous stripping are generally insufficient to explain HI deficiency.
Strangulation and tidal interactions may also play significant roles.
Abstract
Galaxies in compact groups tend to be deficient in neutral hydrogen compared to isolated galaxies of similar optical properties. In order to investigate the role played by a hot intragroup medium (IGM) for the removal and destruction of HI in these systems, we have performed a Chandra and XMM-Newton study of eight of the most HI deficient Hickson compact groups. Diffuse X-ray emission associated with an IGM is detected in four of the groups, suggesting that galaxy-IGM interactions are not the dominant mechanism driving cold gas out of the group members. No clear evidence is seen for any of the members being currently stripped of any hot gas, nor for galaxies to show enhanced nuclear X-ray activity in the X-ray bright or most HI deficient groups. Combining the inferred IGM distributions with analytical models of representative disc galaxies orbiting within each group, we estimate the HI…
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