Ram-pressure histories of cluster galaxies

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Abstract

Ram-pressure stripping can remove significant amounts of gas from galaxies that orbit in clusters and massive groups, and thus has a large impact on the evolution of cluster galaxies. In this paper, we reconstruct the present-day distribution of ram pressure and the ram-pressure histories of cluster galaxies. To this aim, we combine the Millennium Simulation and an associated semi-analytic model of galaxy evolution with analytic models for the gas distribution in clusters. We find that about one quarter of galaxies in massive clusters are subject to strong ram pressures that are likely to cause an expedient loss of all gas. Strong ram pressures occur predominantly in the inner core of the cluster, where both the gas density and the galaxy velocity are higher. Since their accretion on to a massive system, more than 64 per cent of galaxies that reside in a cluster today have experienced strong ram pressures of >10-11 dyn cm-2 which most likely led to a substantial loss of the gas. Journal compilation © 2007 RAS.

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Brüggen, M., & De Lucia, G. (2008). Ram-pressure histories of cluster galaxies. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 383(4), 1336–1342. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2966.2007.12670.x

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