Dwarf-Dwarf Interactions Can Both Trigger and Quench Star Formation

Abstract

It is exceedingly rare to find quiescent low-mass galaxies in the field. UGC5205 is an example of such a quenched field dwarf (M3×108MM_\star\sim3\times10^8M_\odot). Despite a wealth of cold gas (MHI3.5×108MM_{\rm HI}\sim 3.5 \times 10^8 M_\odot) and GALEX emission that indicates significant star formation in the past few hundred Myr, there is no detection of Hα\alpha emission -- star formation in the last 10\sim 10 Myr -- across the face of the galaxy. Meanwhile, the near equal-mass companion of UGC5205, PGC027864, is starbursting (EWHα>1000\rm EW_{\rm H\alpha}>1000 Angstrom). In this work, we present new Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) 21 cm line observations of UGC5205 that demonstrate that the lack of star formation is caused by an absence of HI in the main body of the galaxy. The HI of UGC5205 is highly disturbed; the bulk of the HI resides in several kpc-long tails, while the HI of PGC027864 is dominated by ordered rotation. We model the stellar populations of UGC5205 to show that, as indicated by the UV-Hα\alpha emission, the galaxy underwent a coordinated quenching event  ⁣100300\sim\!100-300 Myr ago. The asymmetry of outcomes for UGC5205 and PGC027864 demonstrate that major mergers can both quench and trigger star formation in dwarfs. However, because the gas remains bound to the system, we suggest that such mergers only temporarily quench star formation. We estimate a total quenched time of 560\sim 560 Myr for UGC5205, consistent with established upper limits on the quenched fraction of a few percent for dwarfs in the field.Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures. Accepted to Ap

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