Caught in the Act: Strong, Active Ram Pressure Stripping in Virgo Cluster Spiral NGC 4330
Anne Abramson, Jeffrey D. P. Kenney, Hugh H. Crowl, Aeree Chung, J. H., van Gorkom, Bernd Vollmer, and David Schiminovich

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of NGC 4330 in the Virgo Cluster, demonstrating strong ram pressure stripping effects that significantly alter the galaxy's gas distribution and star formation over the past few hundred million years.
Contribution
It offers new multi-wavelength evidence of active ram pressure stripping in NGC 4330, highlighting distinctive features and timescales of gas removal and star formation changes.
Findings
HI gas has been stripped from within the stellar disk to 50-65% of R_25
A distinctive 'upturn' feature indicates active ram pressure at the leading edge
The galaxy's gas and star formation distributions show recent, asymmetric changes
Abstract
We present a multi-wavelength study of NGC 4330, a highly-inclined spiral galaxy in the Virgo Cluster which is a clear example of strong, ongoing ICM-ISM ram pressure stripping. The HI has been removed from well within the undisturbed old stellar disk, to 50% - 65% of R_25. Multi-wavelength data (WIYN BVR and H-alpha, VLA 21-cm HI and radio continuum, and GALEX NUV and FUV) reveal several one-sided extraplanar features likely caused by ram pressure at an intermediate disk-wind angle. At the leading edge of the interaction, the H-alpha and dust extinction curve sharply out of the disk in a remarkable and distinctive "upturn" feature that may be generally useful as a diagnostic indicator of active ram pressure. On the trailing side, the ISM is stretched out in a long tail which contains 10% of the galaxy's total HI emission, 6 - 9% of its NUV-FUV emission, but only 2% of the H-alpha. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
