Distinguishing Ram Pressure from Tidal Interactions: the Size-Shape Difference (SSD) measure
Rory Smith, Stephanie Tonnesen, Katarina Kraljic, Paula Calderon-Castillo, Antonino Marasco, Yara Jaffe, Benedetta Vulcani, Bianca M. Poggianti

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Size-Shape Difference (SSD) measure, a new tool to distinguish between ram pressure stripping and tidal interactions in asymmetric galaxies by analyzing differences in stellar populations.
Contribution
The paper develops and tests the SSD measure, which effectively differentiates between ram pressure and tidal effects in galaxies using simulations, applicable to observations.
Findings
SSD effectively distinguishes ram pressure from tidal interactions.
The measure is more accurate when combined with spiral arm strength.
SSD detects combined effects of tidal and ram pressure interactions.
Abstract
Context: In dense environments, disk galaxies can be subjected to tidal interactions with other galaxies and/or ram pressure stripping. Some morphological features are clearly associated with one or the other interaction (e.g. tidal bridges vs long one-sided linear gas tails). But, under certain circumstances, both mechanisms can result in morphological features that could be confused, such as lopsided or asymmetric disks and unwinding spiral arms. Aims: Our aim is to develop new measures for application to asymmetric galaxies of this type that distinguish gravitational-only tidal interactions from ram pressure stripping, and that can be applied directly to simulations, and potentially to observations. Methods: We define a new measure for galaxies called the Size-Shape Difference (SSD) measure. This measure is sensitive to differences in the size and shape of a younger stellar…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
