ACCESS - V. Dissecting ram-pressure stripping through integral-field spectroscopy and multi-band imaging
P. Merluzzi, G. Busarello, M. A. Dopita, C. P. Haines, D. Steinhauser,, A. Mercurio, A. Rifatto, R. J. Smith, S. Schindler

TL;DR
This study uses integral-field spectroscopy and multi-band imaging to analyze early-stage ram-pressure stripping in a barred spiral galaxy, revealing complex gas dynamics, shock excitation, and star formation triggered by the interaction with the intra-cluster medium.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence and simulations of ram-pressure stripping effects on a massive galaxy outside cluster cores, highlighting the process's efficiency.
Findings
Detection of one-sided extraplanar ionized gas with complex kinematics
Identification of shock excitation and star formation in the galaxy
Simulation constrains the timing and angle of ram-pressure stripping onset
Abstract
We study the case of a bright (L>L*) barred spiral galaxy from the rich cluster A3558 in the Shapley supercluster core (z=0.05) undergoing ram-pressure stripping. Integral-field spectroscopy, complemented by multi-band imaging, allows us to reveal the impact of ram pressure on the interstellar medium. We study in detail the kinematics and the physical conditions of the ionized gas and the properties of the stellar populations. We observe one-sided extraplanar ionized gas along the full extent of the galaxy disc. Narrow-band Halpha imaging resolves this outflow into a complex of knots and filaments. The gas velocity field is complex with the extraplanar gas showing signature of rotation. In all parts of the galaxy, we find a significant contribution from shock excitation, as well as emission powered by star formation. Shock-ionized gas is associated with the turbulent gas outflow and…
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