Bibcode
Knapen, J. H.; Cisternas, M.; Querejeta, Miguel
Bibliographical reference
IAU General Assembly, Meeting #29, #2157195
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8
2015
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
We investigate the influence of interactions on the star formation by
studying a sample of almost 1500 of the nearest galaxies, all within a
distance of 40 Mpc. We define the massive star formation rate (SFR), as
measured from far-IR emission, and the specific star formation rate
(SSFR), which is the former quantity normalised by the stellar mass of
the galaxy, and explore their distribution with morphological type and
with stellar mass. We then calculate the relative enhancement of these
quantities for each galaxy by normalising them by the median SFR and
SSFR values of individual control populations of similar non-interacting
galaxies. We find that both SFR and SSFR are enhanced in interacting
galaxies, and more so as the degree of interaction is higher. The
increase is, however, moderate, reaching a maximum of a factor of 1.9
for the highest degree of interaction (mergers). The SFR and SSFR are
enhanced statistically in the population, but in most individual
interacting galaxies they are not enhanced at all. We discuss how those
galaxies with the largest SFR and/or SSFR enhancement can be defined as
starbursts. We argue that this study based on a representative sample of
nearby galaxies should be used to place strong constraints on studies
based on samples of galaxies at larger distances, beyond the local
Universe.