Ultraviolet Morphologies and Star-Formation Rates of CLASH Brightest Cluster Galaxies
Megan Donahue, Thomas Connor, Kevin Fogarty, Yuan Li, G. Mark Voit,, Marc Postman, Anton Koekemoer, John Moustakas, Larry Bradley, Holland Ford

TL;DR
This study uses UV imaging from the CLASH project to analyze the diverse morphologies of star-forming regions in brightest cluster galaxies, linking observed structures to simulations of precipitation-driven feedback.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed morphological comparison of UV structures in BCGs with simulations of precipitation-driven gas condensation and star formation.
Findings
UV morphologies range from smooth to filamentary structures.
Star formation rates reach up to 80 solar masses per year.
UV structures resemble cold-gas features predicted by feedback simulations.
Abstract
Brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) are usually quiescent, but many exhibit star formation. Here we exploit the opportunity provided by rest-frame UV imaging of galaxy clusters in the CLASH (Cluster Lensing and Supernovae with Hubble) Multi-Cycle Treasury Project to reveal the diversity of UV morphologies in BCGs and to compare them with recent simulations of the cool, star-forming gas structures produced by precipitation-driven feedback. All of the CLASH BCGs are detected in the rest-frame UV (280 nm), regardless of their star-formation activity, because evolved stellar populations produce a modest amount of UV light that traces the relatively smooth, symmetric, and centrally peaked stellar distribution seen in the near infrared. Ultraviolet morphologies among the BCGs with strong UV excesses exhibit distinctive knots, multiple elongated clumps, and extended filaments of emission that…
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