Shapley Supercluster Survey: Ram-Pressure Stripping vs. Tidal Interactions in the Shapley Supercluster
P. Merluzzi, G. Busarello, M. A. Dopita, C. P. Haines, D. Steinhauser,, H. Bourdin, P. Mazzotta

TL;DR
This study investigates galaxy transformations in the Shapley supercluster, demonstrating how ram-pressure stripping and tidal interactions influence low-mass galaxies through observations and simulations, highlighting the complex environmental effects on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence and simulation analysis distinguishing the roles of ram-pressure stripping and tidal interactions in galaxy transformation within a supercluster environment.
Findings
Ram-pressure stripping causes extended ionized gas tails in galaxies.
Tidal interactions are indicated by gas extensions towards companions.
Simulations successfully reproduce gas kinematics for RPS and suggest combined effects.
Abstract
We present two new examples of galaxies undergoing transformation in the Shapley supercluster core. These low-mass (stellar mass from 0.4E10 to 1E10 Msun) galaxies are members of the two clusters SC-1329-313 (z=0.045) and SC-1327-312 (z=0.049). Integral-field spectroscopy complemented by imaging in ugriK bands and in Halpha narrow-band are used to disentangle the effects of tidal interaction (TI) and ram-pressure stripping (RPS). In both galaxies, SOS-61086 and SOS-90630, we observe one-sided extraplanar ionized gas extending respectively 30kpc and 41kpc in projection from their disks. The galaxies' gaseous disks are truncated and the kinematics of the stellar and gas components are decoupled, supporting the RPS scenario. The emission of the ionized gas extends in the direction of a possible companion for both galaxies suggesting a TI. The overall gas velocity field of SOS-61086 is…
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.
