Unveiling the Complex Circumgalactic Medium: A Comparative Study of Merging and Non-Interacting Galaxy Groups
Antonia Fernandez-Figueroa, Glenn G. Kacprzak, Nikole M. Nielsen,, Tania M. Barone, Hasti Nateghi, Sameer, Deanne B. Fisher, Bronwyn, Reichardt Chu

TL;DR
This study compares the circumgalactic medium (CGM) of merging and non-interacting galaxy groups, revealing that mergers significantly increase CGM complexity, ionization, and metallicity variations, thus influencing galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of CGM properties in merging versus non-interacting galaxy groups using spatially-resolved observations.
Findings
G2's CGM is more kinematically complex and highly ionized.
Merging galaxies' CGM shows greater metallicity diversity.
Simple superposition models do not fit merging galaxy CGM data.
Abstract
While most galaxies live in group environments where they undergo an accelerated evolution, the characteristics of their circumgalactic medium (CGM) remain uncertain. We present an analysis of the CGM of two galaxy groups in different stages of interaction: (G1) a close pair of galaxies () separated by 87 kpc that do not show signs of interactions and (G2) four merging galaxies () separated by 10 kpc. We present spatially-resolved Keck/KCWI galaxy observations and HST/COS quasar spectra (G1 at 48 kpc and G2 at 100 kpc away) to quantify both the resolved galaxy and CGM properties in these two different group environments. G1 contains two typical star-forming galaxies with no evidence of strong outflows. G2 contains two star-forming, one post-starburst and one quiescent galaxy. Both groups have a range of CGM detected metal lines (HI, CII, SiII, SiIII, NV and OVI).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
