Once in a blue stream: Detection of recent star formation in the NGC 7241 stellar stream with MEGARA
David Martinez-Delgado, Santi Roca-Fabrega, Armando Gil de Paz, Denis, Erkal, Juan Miro-Carretero, Dmitry Makarov, Karina T. Voggel, Ryan Leaman,, Walter Boschin, Sarah Pearson, Giuseppe Donatiello, Evgenii Rubtsov, Mohammad, Akhlaghi, M. Angeles Gomez-Flechoso, Samane Raji

TL;DR
This study investigates a blue stellar stream around NGC 7241, using multi-wavelength observations and spectroscopy to determine its origin, star formation activity, and possible progenitor, revealing insights into dwarf galaxy interactions.
Contribution
The paper provides the first spectroscopic confirmation of a star-forming region in a stellar stream around NGC 7241 and discusses its implications for dwarf galaxy evolution and tidal interaction scenarios.
Findings
The detected over-density is likely a star-forming remnant of a low-mass dwarf galaxy.
The stream's properties suggest a progenitor mass comparable to dwarf galaxies.
Blue stellar streams with star formation are predicted by cosmological simulations of lighter galaxies.
Abstract
In this work we study the striking case of a narrow blue stream around the NGC 7241 galaxy and its foreground dwarf companion. We want to figure out if the stream was generated by tidal interaction with NGC 7241 or it first interacted with the foreground dwarf companion and later both fell together towards NGC 7241. We use four sets of observations, including a follow-up spectroscopic study with the MEGARA instrument at the 10.4-m Gran Telescopio Canarias. Our data suggest that the compact object we detected in the stream is a foreground Milky Way halo star. Near this compact object we detect emission lines overlapping a bluer and fainter blob of the stream that is clearly visible in both ultra-violet and optical deep images. From its heliocentric systemic radial velocity (Vsyst= 1548.58+/-1.80 km s^-1) and new UV and optical broad-band photometry, we conclude that this over-density…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
