Abstract
We present the discovery of a 100.kpc low-frequency radio tail behind the nearby group galaxy, NGC 2276. The extent of this tail is a factor of ten larger than previously reported from higher-frequency radio and X-ray imaging. The radio morphology of the galaxy disc and tail suggest that the tail was produced via ram-pressure stripping, cementing NGC 2276 as the clearest known example of ram-pressure stripping in a low-mass group. With multi-frequency imaging, we extract radio continuum spectra between 0.MHz and 1.2.GHz as a function of projected distance along the tail. All of the spectra are well fit by a simple model of spectral ageing due to synchrotron and inverse-Compton losses. From these fits we estimate a velocity of 870.km.sâ 1 for the stripped plasma across the plane of the sky, and a three-dimensional orbital velocity of 970.km.sâ 1 for NGC 2276. The orbital speed that we derive is in excellent agreement with the previous estimates from an X-ray shock analysis, despite the completely independent methodology.
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Roberts, I. D., Van Weeren, R. J., De Gasperin, F., Botteon, A., Edler, H. W., Ignesti, A., … Tomičić, N. (2024). A 100 kpc ram pressure tail trailing the group galaxy NGC 2276. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 689. https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202450672
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