TiNy Titans: The Role of Dwarf-Dwarf Interactions in the Evolution of Low Mass Galaxies
S. Stierwalt, G. Besla, D. Patton, K. Johnson, N. Kallivayalil, M., Putman, G. Privon, G. Ross

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates how interactions between dwarf galaxies influence star formation, revealing that such interactions can significantly enhance star formation activity regardless of environment, with implications for dwarf galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First systematic observational analysis of star formation in interacting dwarf galaxies, demonstrating star formation enhancement extends to low-mass systems and occurs throughout the merger process.
Findings
Star formation is enhanced by a factor of 2.3 in paired dwarfs at separations <50 kpc.
20% of dwarf pairs experience starbursts with Ha EQW >100 A.
Most dwarf pairs have similar gas fractions to unpaired dwarfs, indicating reservoirs of non-starforming gas.
Abstract
We introduce TiNy Titans (TNT), the first systematic study of star formation and the subsequent processing of the interstellar medium in interacting dwarf galaxies. Here we present the first results from a multiwavelength observational program based on a sample of 104 dwarf galaxy pairs selected from a range of environments within the SDSS and caught in various stages of interaction. The TNT dwarf pairs span mass ratios of M1/M2 <10, projected separations <50 kpc, and pair member masses of 7< log(M_*/Msun) <9.7. The dwarf-dwarf merger sequence, as defined by TNT, demonstrates conclusively and for the first time that the star formation enhancement observed for massive galaxy pairs also extends to dwarfs. Star formation is enhanced in paired dwarfs in otherwise isolated environments by a factor of 2.3 (+/- 0.7) at pair separations < 50 kpc relative to unpaired analogs. Starbursts, with Ha…
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.
