Tidal interaction vs. ram pressure stripping effects as seen in X-rays. Hot gas in group and cluster galaxies
M. Wezgowiec, D. J. Bomans, M. Ehle, K. T. Chyzy, M. Urbanik, J., Braine, M. Soida

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray observations to differentiate between tidal interactions and ram pressure stripping effects on galaxies in clusters, revealing that gas temperature analysis can identify the dominant environmental influence.
Contribution
It demonstrates that X-ray spectral analysis of hot gas can effectively distinguish between tidal and ram pressure effects in cluster galaxies, providing a new diagnostic tool.
Findings
NGC 4254 shows no temperature increase, indicating tidal interactions.
NGC 4569 exhibits higher temperature at the radio ridge, suggesting ram-pressure effects.
Main distortions in galaxies are primarily driven by tidal interactions rather than ram pressure.
Abstract
The hot intracluster/intragroup medium (ICM/IGM) and a high galaxy density can lead to perturbations of the galactic interstellar medium (ISM) due to ram pressure and/or tidal interaction effects. In radio polarimetry observations, both phenomena may manifest similar features. X-ray data can help to determine the real origin of the perturbation. We analyse the distribution and physical properties of the hot gas in the Virgo cluster spiral galaxies NGC 4254 and NGC 4569, which indicate that the cluster environment has had a significant influence on their properties. By performing both spatial and spectral analyses of X-ray data, we try to distinguish between two major phenomena: tidal and ram pressure interactions. We compare our findings with the case of NGC 2276, in which a shock was reported, by analysing XMM-Newton X-ray data for this galaxy. We use archival XMM-Newton observations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
