Molecular and Ionized Gas in Tidal Dwarf Galaxies: The Spatially Resolved Star-Formation Relation
Navyasree Kovakkuni, Federico Lelli, Pierre-alain Duc, M\'ed\'eric, Boquien, Jonathan Braine, Elias Brinks, Vassilis Charmandaris, Francoise, Combes, Jeremy Fensch, Ute Lisenfeld, Stacy McGaugh, J. Chris Mihos, Marcel., S. Pawlowski, Yves. Revaz, Peter. M. Weilbacher

TL;DR
This study investigates the spatially resolved star formation relation in tidal dwarf galaxies using ALMA and MUSE data, revealing a hybrid star formation mode with some regions resembling normal spirals and others starbursts.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spatially resolved analysis of molecular and ionized gas in TDGs, showing their star formation behavior is a mix of normal and starburst characteristics.
Findings
TDGs follow the same global $ m ext{SFR}- m ext{gas}$ relation as regular galaxies.
Most star-forming regions in TDGs align with spiral galaxy relations, but with higher dispersion.
A significant fraction of regions exhibit starburst activity linked to super star cluster formation.
Abstract
Tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs) are low-mass objects that form within tidal and/or collisional debris ejected from more massive interacting galaxies. We use CO() observations from ALMA and integral-field spectroscopy from MUSE to study molecular and ionized gas in three TDGs: two around the collisional galaxy NGC 5291 and one in the late-stage merger NGC 7252. The CO and H emission is more compact than the HI emission and displaced from the HI dynamical center, so these gas phases cannot be used to study the internal dynamics of TDGs. We use CO, HI, and H data to measure the surface densities of molecular gas (), atomic gas () and star-formation rate (), respectively. We confirm that TDGs follow the same spatially integrated relation of regular galaxies, where $\Sigma_{\rm gas} =…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications
