Enhanced Star Formation Activity of Extreme Jellyfish Galaxies in Massive Clusters and the Role of Ram Pressure Stripping
Jeong Hwan Lee, Myung Gyoon Lee, Jae Yeon Mun, Brian S. Cho, and Jisu, Kang

TL;DR
This study shows that the star formation activity of jellyfish galaxies in massive clusters increases with cluster mass and ram pressure strength, highlighting the short-term impact of ram pressure stripping on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence linking host cluster properties and ram pressure strength to enhanced star formation in jellyfish galaxies.
Findings
Star formation activity correlates positively with cluster velocity dispersion.
Jellyfish galaxies with strong RPS features have higher SFR and central concentration.
Starburstiness increases with ICM density and ram pressure strength.
Abstract
Jellyfish galaxies are an excellent tool to investigate the short-term effects of ram pressure stripping (RPS) on star formation in cluster environments. It has been thought that the star formation activity of jellyfish galaxies may depend on the host cluster properties, but previous studies have not yet found a clear correlation. In this study, we estimate the \Ha-based star formation rates (SFRs) of five jellyfish galaxies in massive clusters () at using Gemini GMOS/IFU observations to explore the relationship. Combining our results with those in the literature, we find that the star formation activity of jellyfish galaxies shows a positive correlation with their host cluster velocity dispersion as a proxy of cluster mass and dynamical states. We divide the jellyfish galaxy sample into two groups with strong and weak RPS…
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