Jellyfish galaxy candidates at low redshift
B.M. Poggianti, G. Fasano, A. Omizzolo, M. Gullieuszik, D. Bettoni, A., Moretti, A. Paccagnella, Y. L. Jaffe', B. Vulcani, J. Fritz, W. Couch, M., D'Onofrio

TL;DR
This study systematically identifies and analyzes jellyfish galaxy candidates at low redshift across various environments, revealing that gas stripping is common even outside massive clusters and affects galaxy star formation.
Contribution
First comprehensive catalog of low-z jellyfish galaxy candidates across different environments, with analysis of their properties and environmental distribution.
Findings
Candidates are found in all cluster environments and at all radii.
Stripping candidates are also present in groups and low-mass haloes.
Stripped galaxies tend to have higher star formation rates than similar non-stripped galaxies.
Abstract
Galaxies that are being stripped of their gas can sometimes be recognized from their optical appearance. Extreme examples of stripped galaxies are the so-called ``jellyfish galaxies'', that exhibit tentacles of debris material with a characteristic jellyfish morphology. We have conducted the first systematic search for galaxies that are being stripped of their gas at low-z (z=0.04-0.07) in different environments, selecting galaxies with varying degrees of morphological evidence for stripping. We have visually inspected B and V-band images and identified 344 candidates in 71 galaxy clusters of the OMEGAWINGS+WINGS sample and 75 candidates in groups and lower mass structures in the PM2GC sample. We present the atlas of stripping candidates and a first analysis of their environment and their basic properties, such as morphologies, star formation rates and galaxy stellar masses. Candidates…
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