Magnetic field evolution in interacting galaxies
Robert T. Drzazga, Krzysztof T. Chyzy, Wojciech Jurusik, Krzysztof, Wiorkiewicz

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy interactions influence magnetic field evolution, revealing a peak in magnetic strength during coalescence and implications for cosmic ray propagation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of magnetic field evolution throughout different stages of galaxy interactions and mergers.
Findings
Magnetic field strength peaks at nuclear coalescence (~25μG).
Magnetic fields are weakly affected by star formation rate overall.
Interactions can magnetize the intergalactic medium and influence cosmic ray deflections.
Abstract
Violent gravitational interactions can change the morphologies of galaxies and, by means of merging, transform them into elliptical galaxies. We aim to investigate how they affect the evolution of galactic magnetic fields. We selected 16 systems of interacting galaxies and compared their radio emission and estimated magnetic field strengths with their star-forming activity, far-infrared emission, and the stage of tidal interaction. We find a general evolution of magnetic fields: for weak interactions the strength of magnetic field is almost constant (10-15muG) as interaction advances, then it increases up to 2x, peaks at the nuclear coalescence (25muG), and decreases again, down to 5-6muG, for the post-merger remnants. The magnetic field strength for whole galaxies is weakly affected by the star formation rate (SFR), while the dependence is higher for galactic centres. We show that the…
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