Long Tidal Tails in Merging Galaxies and Their Implications
Jian Ren, Xian Zhong Zheng, David Valls-Gabaud, Pierre-Alain Duc, Eric, F. Bell, Zhizheng Pan, Jianbo Qin, Dongdong Shi, Man Qiao, Yongqiang He, Run, Wen

TL;DR
This study analyzes the properties and formation of long tidal tails in merging galaxies, revealing their shapes, associated dwarf galaxies, and implications for galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the largest statistical analysis of tidal tails, classifies their shapes, and estimates the contribution of tidal dwarf galaxies to the dwarf galaxy population.
Findings
41% straight, 47% curved, 12% plume tidal tails.
165 tidal dwarf galaxies identified, with a formation rate of 0.36 per merger.
Approximately 5% of local dwarf galaxies are of tidal origin.
Abstract
We investigate the properties of long tidal tails using the largest to date sample of 461 merging galaxies with within from the COSMOS survey in combination with {\it Hubble Space Telescope} imaging data. Long tidal tails can be briefly divided into three shape types: straight (41\,per\,cent), curved (47\,per\,cent) and plume (12\,per\,cent). Their host galaxies are mostly at late stages of merging, although 31\,per\,cent are galaxy pairs with projected separations \,kpc. The high formation rate of straight tidal tails needs to be understood as the projection of curved tidal tails accounts for only a small fraction of the straight tails. We identify 165 tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs), yielding a TDG production rate of 0.36 per merger. Combined with a galaxy merger fraction and a TDG survival rate from the literature, we estimate…
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