1 research outputs found

    Molecular and Ionized Gas in Tidal Dwarf Galaxies: The Spatially Resolved Star-Formation Relation

    Full text link
    Tidal dwarf galaxies (TDGs) are low-mass objects that form within tidal and/or collisional debris ejected from more massive interacting galaxies. We use CO(1−01-0) observations from ALMA and integral-field spectroscopy from MUSE to study molecular and ionized gas in three TDGs: two around the collisional galaxy NGC 5291 and one in the late-stage merger NGC 7252. The CO and Hα\alpha emission is more compact than the HI emission and displaced from the HI dynamical center, so these gas phases cannot be used to study the internal dynamics of TDGs. We use CO, HI, and Hα\alpha data to measure the surface densities of molecular gas (Σmol\Sigma_{\rm mol}), atomic gas (Σatom\Sigma_{\rm atom}) and star-formation rate (ΣSFR\Sigma_{\rm SFR}), respectively. We confirm that TDGs follow the same spatially integrated ΣSFR−Σgas\Sigma_{\rm SFR}-\Sigma_{\rm gas} relation of regular galaxies, where Σgas=Σmol+Σatom\Sigma_{\rm gas} = \Sigma_{\rm mol} + \Sigma_{\rm atom}, even though they are HI dominated. We find a more complex behaviour in terms of the spatially resolved ΣSFR−Σmol\Sigma_{\rm SFR}-\Sigma_{\rm mol} relation on sub-kpc scales. The majority (∼\sim60%\%) of SF regions in TDGs lie on the same ΣSFR−Σmol\Sigma_{\rm SFR}-\Sigma_{\rm mol} relation of normal spiral galaxies but show a higher dispersion around the mean. The remaining fraction of SF regions (∼\sim40%\%) lie in the starburst region and are associated with the formation of massive super star clusters, as shown by Hubble Space Telescope images. We conclude that the local SF activity in TDGs proceeds in a hybrid fashion, with some regions comparable to normal spiral galaxies and others to extreme starbursts.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, Accepted for publication in MNRA
    corecore