Virgo Filaments V: Disrupting the Baryon Cycle in the NGC 5364 Galaxy Group
Rose A. Finn, Gregory Rudnick, Pascale Jablonka, Mpati Ramatsoku, Gautam Nagaraj, Benedetta Vulcani, Rebecca A. Koopmann, Matteo Fossati, James Agostino, Yannick Bahe, Santiago Garcia-Burillo, Gianluca Castignani, Francoise Combes, Kim Conger, Gabriella De Lucia, Vandana Desai

TL;DR
This study investigates how environmental effects like ram pressure stripping and tidal interactions disrupt the baryon cycle in galaxies within the NGC 5364 group, revealing complex gas and star formation morphologies.
Contribution
First detailed Hα and H I observations of NGC 5364 group galaxies showing multiple environmental processes affecting baryonic components.
Findings
Galaxies show disturbed morphologies, including H I tails and truncated disks.
Ram pressure stripping explains most observed gas features.
Multiple physical mechanisms disrupt the baryon cycle in these galaxies.
Abstract
The Virgo Filament Survey (VFS) is a comprehensive study of galaxies that reside in the extended filamentary structures surrounding the Virgo Cluster, out to 12 virial radii. The primary goal is to characterize all of the dominant baryonic components within galaxies and to understand whether and how they are affected by the filament environment. A key constituent of VFS is a narrowband H imaging survey of over 600 galaxies, VFS-H. The H images reveal detailed, resolved maps of the ionized gas and massive star-formation. This imaging is particularly powerful as a probe of environmentally-induced quenching because different physical processes affect the spatial distribution of star formation in different ways. In this paper, we present the first results from the VFS-H for the NGC~5364 group, a low-mass ( system located at…
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