Identification of ram pressure stripping features in galaxies using citizen science
Jacob P. Crossett, Yara L. Jaff\'e, Sean L. McGee, Rory Smith, Callum, Bellhouse, Daniela Bettoni, Benedetta Vulcani, Kshitija Kelkar, Ana C. C., Louren\c{c}o

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that citizen science classifications, particularly from Galaxy Zoo, can effectively identify ram pressure stripped galaxies, significantly increasing candidate detection and aiding understanding of galaxy evolution in clusters.
Contribution
The paper shows that citizen science classifications can reliably identify ram pressure stripped galaxies, expanding the sample size for studying environmental galaxy evolution.
Findings
Ram pressure stripped galaxies show more irregular morphologies.
Galaxy Zoo classifications correlate with expert identifications.
Identified 101 new candidate galaxies with potential ram pressure stripping features.
Abstract
Ram pressure stripped galaxies are rare cases of environmental evolution in action. However, our ability to understand these galaxies is limited by the small number of identified galaxies experiencing ram pressure stripping (RPS). Our aim is to explore the efficacy of citizen science classifications in identifying ram pressure stripped galaxies, and use this to aid in motivating new samples of ram pressure stripped candidates. We compile a sample of over 200 known ram pressure stripped galaxies from existing literature, with morphological classifications obtained from Galaxy Zoo. We compare these galaxies with magnitude and redshift-matched comparison cluster and field galaxies. Additionally, we create a sample of SDSS cluster galaxies, with morphological classifications similar to known ram pressure stripped galaxies, and compare the fraction of potential new RPS candidates against…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
