Jellyfish galaxies with the IllustrisTNG simulations: I. Gas-stripping phenomena in the full cosmological context
Kiyun Yun, Annalisa Pillepich, Elad Zinger, Dylan Nelson, Martina, Donnari, Gandhali Joshi, Vicente Rodriguez-Gomez, Shy Genel, Rainer, Weinberger, Mark Vogelsberger, Lars Hernquist

TL;DR
This study uses the IllustrisTNG simulations to analyze the properties and demographics of jellyfish galaxies, revealing their gas-stripping phenomena, orbital characteristics, and dependence on host environment in a cosmological context.
Contribution
First comprehensive analysis of jellyfish galaxies in full cosmological simulations, linking gas stripping features with galaxy dynamics and environment.
Findings
31% of cluster satellites show ram-pressure stripping signatures
Jellyfish galaxies are more common at larger cluster-centric distances
They tend to orbit supersonically and have gaseous tails opposite to their motion
Abstract
We use IllustrisTNG, a suite of gravity and MHD simulations, to study the demographics and properties of jellyfish galaxies in the full cosmological context. By jellyfish galaxies, we mean satellites orbiting in massive groups and clusters that exhibit highly asymmetric distributions of gas and gas tails. We use the TNG100 run and select galaxies at redshifts with stellar mass exceeding and with host halo masses of . Among more than about 6000 (2600) galaxies with stars (and some gas), we identify 800 jellyfish galaxies by visually inspecting their gas and stellar mass maps in random projections. About of cluster satellites are found with signatures of ram-pressure stripping and gaseous tails stemming from the main luminous bodies. This is a lower limit, since the random orientation entails a loss of about …
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