Triggered Star Formation in Galaxy Pairs at z=0.08-0.38
Deborah Freedman Woods, Margaret J. Geller, Michael J. Kurtz, Eduard, Westra, Daniel G. Fabricant, Ian Dell'Antonio

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy interactions at redshift 0.08-0.38 can trigger star formation, quantifying its frequency and timescale using spectroscopic data and population models.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed measurement of tidally triggered star formation frequency and timescale in galaxy pairs at intermediate redshift.
Findings
32% of galaxy pairs show doubled star formation rates.
Triggered star formation lasts approximately 300-400 million years.
D_n4000 effectively classifies galaxy populations.
Abstract
We measure the strength, frequency, and timescale of tidally triggered star formation at redshift z=0.08-0.38 in a spectroscopically complete sample of galaxy pairs drawn from the magnitude-limited redshift survey of 9,825 Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS) galaxies with R<20.3. To examine the evidence for tidal triggering, we identify a volume-limited sample of major (|\Delta M_R|<1.75, corresponding to mass ratio >1/5) pair galaxies with $M_R < -20.8 in the redshift range z=0.08-0.31. The size and completeness of the spectroscopic survey allows us to focus on regions of low local density. The spectrophotometric calibration enables the use of the 4000 Ang break (D_n4000), the H\alpha specific star formation rate (SSFR_{H\alpha}), and population models to characterize the galaxies. We show that D_n4000 is a useful population classification tool; it closely tracks the…
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