A dynamical model for the Taffy galaxies UGC 12914/5
B. Vollmer (1), J. Braine (2,3), M. Soida (4) ((1) CDS, Observatoire, de Strasbourg, France, (2) Univ. Bordeaux, Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de, Bordeaux, France, (3) CNRS, LAB, UMR 5804, Floirac, France, (4) Astronomical, Observatory, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland)

TL;DR
This paper presents dynamical simulations of the Taffy galaxies UGC 12914/15, reproducing key features of their gas and magnetic field structures resulting from a head-on collision, to interpret multi-wavelength observations.
Contribution
The study introduces a detailed dynamical model including magnetic fields and gas physics to match observations of the Taffy galaxies' collision effects.
Findings
Simulations reproduce the gas bridge and magnetic field structures.
Estimated total bridge gas mass is 5-6 x 10^9 solar masses.
The model explains the observed gas and magnetic features of the collision.
Abstract
The spectacular head-on collision of the two gas-rich galaxies of the Taffy system, UGC 12914/15, gives us a unique opportunity to study the consequences of a direct ISM-ISM collision. To interpret existing multi-wavelength observations, we made dynamical simulations of the Taffy system including a sticky particle component. To compare simulation snapshots to HI and CO observations, we assume that the molecular fraction of the gas depends on the square root of the gas volume density. For the comparison of our simulations with observations of polarized radio continuum emission, we calculated the evolution of the 3D large-scale magnetic field for our simulations. The induction equations including the time-dependent gas-velocity fields from the dynamical model were solved for this purpose. Our simulations reproduce the stellar distribution of the primary galaxy, UGC 12914, the prominent HI…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
