Star formation in shocked cluster spirals and their tails
E. Roediger, M. Br\"uggen, M.S. Owers, H. Ebeling, M. Sun

TL;DR
This paper uses hydrodynamical simulations to study star formation in galaxies undergoing ram pressure stripping in clusters, revealing how shocks and gas dynamics influence star formation in disks and tails.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into the morphology and star formation patterns in stripped galaxies, especially in merging clusters with shock interactions.
Findings
Reproduces jellyfish galaxy morphology in simulations.
Shows star formation occurs in knots within tails.
Highlights asymmetries caused by ICM wind and disk rotation.
Abstract
Recent observations of ram pressure stripped spiral galaxies in clusters revealed details of the stripping process, i.e., the truncation of all interstellar medium (ISM) phases and of star formation (SF) in the disk, and multiphase star-forming tails. Some stripped galaxies, in particular in merging clusters, develop spectacular star-forming tails, giving them a jellyfish-like appearance. In merging clusters, merger shocks in the intra-cluster medium (ICM) are thought to have overrun these galaxies, enhancing the ambient ICM pressure and thus triggering SF, gas stripping and tail formation. We present idealised hydrodynamical simulations of this scenario, including standard descriptions for SF and stellar feedback. To aid the interpretation of recent and upcoming observations, we focus on particular structures and dynamics in SF patterns in the remaining gas disk and in the near tails,…
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