PRIMUS: Enhanced Specific Star Formation Rates In Close Galaxy Pairs
Kenneth C. Wong, Michael R. Blanton, Scott M. Burles, Alison L. Coil,, Richard J. Cool, Daniel J. Eisenstein, John Moustakas, Guangtun Zhu, Stephane, Arnouts

TL;DR
This study shows that close galaxy pairs experience a significant increase in specific star formation rates due to tidal interactions, with the effect being more pronounced at smaller separations and showing marginal evolution over redshift.
Contribution
It provides the first direct observational evidence of tidally-triggered star formation enhancement in isolated galaxy pairs up to z~0.75, using a large spectroscopic survey.
Findings
Galaxies in close pairs have 15-20% higher SSFR than isolated galaxies.
The SSFR enhancement increases to 25-30% for pairs with smaller separations.
Redshift evolution of the enhancement is marginal, suggesting limited impact on cosmic SFR decline.
Abstract
Tidal interactions between galaxies can trigger star formation, which contributes to the global star formation rate density of the universe and could be a factor in the transformation of blue, star-forming galaxies to red, quiescent galaxies over cosmic time. We investigate tidally-triggered star formation in isolated close galaxy pairs drawn from the Prism Multi-Object Survey (PRIMUS), a low-dispersion prism redshift survey that has measured ~120,000 robust galaxy redshifts over 9.1 deg^2 out to z ~ 1. We select a sample of galaxies in isolated galaxy pairs at redshifts 0.25 < z < 0.75, with no other objects within a projected separation of 300 h^-1 kpc and dz/(1+z) = 0.01, and compare them to a control sample of isolated galaxies to test for systematic differences in their rest-frame FUV-r and NUV-r colors as a proxy for relative specific SFR. We find that galaxies in r_p < 50 h^-1…
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