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The Dwarf Irregular Galaxy UGC 7636 Exposed: Stripping at Work in the Virgo Cluster

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Published 2000 January 11 © 2000. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Henry Lee et al 2000 ApJ 530 L17 DOI 10.1086/312483

1538-4357/530/1/L17

Abstract

We present the results of optical spectroscopy of a newly discovered H II region residing in the H I gas cloud located between the dwarf irregular galaxy UGC 7636 and the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 4472 in the Virgo Cluster. By comparing UGC 7636 with dwarf irregular galaxies in the field, we show that the H I cloud must have originated from UGC 7636 because (1) the oxygen abundance of the cloud agrees with that expected for a galaxy with the blue luminosity of UGC 7636 and (2) M/LB for UGC 7636 becomes consistent with the measured oxygen abundance of the cloud if the H I mass of the cloud is added back into UGC 7636. It is likely that tides from NGC 4472 first loosened the H I gas, after which ram pressure stripping removed the gas from UGC 7636.

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10.1086/312483