WALLABY Pre-Pilot Survey: The effects of tidal interaction on radial distribution of color in galaxies of the Eridanus supergroup
Abstract
We study the tidal interaction of galaxies in the Eridanus supergroup, using HI data from the pre-pilot survey of WALLABY (Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind surveY). We obtain optical photometric measurements and quantify the strength of tidal perturbation using a tidal parameter Ssum. For low-mass galaxies of M* 109 M, we find a dependence of decreasing HI-to-optical disk size ratio with increasing Ssum, but no dependence of HI spectral line asymmetry with Ssum. This is consistent with the behavior expected under tidal stripping. We confirm that the color profile shape and color gradient depend on the stellar mass, but there is additional correlation of low-mass galaxies having their color gradients within 2R50 increasing with higher Ssum. For these low-mass galaxies, the dependence of color gradients on Ssum is driven by color becoming progressively redder in the inner disk when tidal perturbations are stronger. For high-mass galaxies, there is no dependence of color gradients on Ssum, and we find a marginal reddening throughout the disks with increasing Ssum. Our result highlights tidal interaction as an important environmental effect in producing the faint end of the star formation suppressed sequence in galaxy groups.
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