Young, blue, and isolated stellar systems in the Virgo Cluster. II. A new class of stellar system
Michael G. Jones, David J. Sand, Michele Bellazzini, Kristine, Spekkens, Ananthan Karunakaran, Elizabeth A. K. Adams, Giuseppina Battaglia,, Giacomo Beccari, Paul Bennet, John M. Cannon, Giovanni Cresci, Denija, Crnojevic, Nelson Caldwell, Jackson Fuson, Puragra Guhathakurta

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new class of small, metal-rich, blue stellar systems in the Virgo Cluster, likely formed from ram pressure stripping of gas from infalling galaxies, and explores their properties and origins.
Contribution
It introduces a new class of stellar systems formed from ram pressure stripping, characterized by their isolation, high metallicity, and young stellar populations.
Findings
Four systems are low-mass, blue, and metal-rich with irregular morphologies.
Most systems are isolated with minimal gas reservoirs.
Ram pressure stripping is the favored formation mechanism.
Abstract
We discuss five blue stellar systems in the direction of the Virgo cluster, analogous to the enigmatic object SECCO 1 (AGC 226067). These objects were identified based on their optical and UV morphology and followed up with HI observations with the VLA (and GBT), MUSE/VLT optical spectroscopy, and HST imaging. These new data indicate that one system is a distant group of galaxies. The remaining four are extremely low mass (), are dominated by young, blue stars, have highly irregular and clumpy morphologies, are only a few kpc across, yet host an abundance of metal-rich, , HII regions. These high metallicities indicate that these stellar systems formed from gas stripped from much more massive galaxies. Despite the young age of their stellar populations, only one system is detected in HI, while the remaining three have…
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