Strange filamentary structures ("fireballs") around a merger galaxy in the Coma cluster of galaxies
M. Yoshida, M. Yagi, Y. Komiyama, H. Furusawa, N. Kashikawa, Y., Koyama, H. Yamanoi, T. Hattori, S. Okamura

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of unusual filamentary structures called 'fireballs' around a merger galaxy in the Coma cluster, likely formed by ram pressure stripping, providing insights into intra-cluster star formation.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of 'fireballs' in a galaxy cluster, linking their formation to ram pressure stripping during galaxy mergers.
Findings
Discovery of blue filaments and knots extending 80 kpc from a merger galaxy
Evidence of recent star formation in bright knots, ceased in filaments
Likely formation mechanism is ram pressure stripping in a cluster environment
Abstract
We found an unusual complex of narrow blue filaments, bright blue knots, and H-alpha emitting filaments and clouds, which morphologically resembled a complex of ``fireballs,'' extending up to 80 kpc south from an E+A galaxy RB199 in the Coma cluster. The galaxy has a highly disturbed morphology indicative of a galaxy--galaxy merger remnant. The narrow blue filaments extend in straight shapes toward the south from the galaxy, and several bright blue knots are located at the southern ends of the filaments. The Rc band absolute magnitudes, half light radii and estimated masses of the bright knots are -12 - -13 mag, 200 - 300 pc and 10^6-7 Msolar, respectively. Long, narrow H-alpha emitting filaments are connected at the south edge of the knots. The average color of the fireballs is B - Rc = 0.5, which is bluer than RB199 (B - R = 0.99), suggesting that most of the stars in the fireballs…
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