The supersonic nature of jellyfish galaxies
Alessandro Ignesti, Francesca Loi, Antonino Marasco, Benedetta Vulcani, Bianca M. Poggianti, Christoph Pfrommer, Marco Gullieuszik, Alessia Moretti, Paolo Serra, Stephanie Tonnesen, Rory Smith, Cecilia Bacchini, Marc A. W. Verheijen, Myriam Gitti, Anna Wolter, Koshy George

TL;DR
This study shows that supersonic motion and magnetic field interactions are key to star formation in the tails of jellyfish galaxies within clusters.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence linking magnetic fields, shock compression, and star formation in jellyfish galaxy tails, highlighting the role of supersonic motion.
Findings
Polarized emission observed in a small tail fraction (~10%) of JO147.
Positive correlation between Mach number and tail star formation activity.
Supersonic motion identified as necessary for star formation in stripped tails.
Abstract
All gas-rich galaxies in cluster environments are expected to experience ram-pressure stripping from the intra-cluster medium. However, only a fraction of these develop ongoing star-formation in their stripped tail, becoming the so-called ``jellyfish'' galaxies. In this work we provide observational evidence that magnetic fields can signal differences in the extraplanar star formation and explore what are the physical conditions that lead to the formation of a jellyfish galaxy. We first focus on JO147, a jellyfish galaxy that features weak star formation activity in its tail. Using MeerKAT radio continuum observations, we discover polarized emission only in a small fraction of its tail, with an average fraction of , and a low Mach number , which suggests a possible association between magnetic field draping, shock-compression of the gas, and extraplanar star…
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