Astrophysics (Index)About

tidal arm

(tidal tail)
(arm of gas and potentially stars leading from a galaxy)

A galaxy's tidal arm (or tidal tail) is a "tail" on a galaxy of gas and stars, in some cases extending lengths greater than the diameter of the galaxy. Such a galaxy is called a tidal-tail galaxy. These are stars pulled out of the galaxy by a nearby galaxy by its galactic tide, a process called tidal stripping. Such a tail can suggest a recent galaxy merger when no other separate galaxy is near enough to have triggered it. Such a merger can instigate star formation, including within the tail: as much as a tenth of such a galaxy's star formation can be within such a tail.

The term tidal stream is used for similar structures drawn by tidal forces from clouds or stellar clusters.


There has been a theory that "ordinary" spiral arms are the result of tidal interaction with other galaxies, suggesting they could be termed tidal arms.


(galaxies,gravity,mergers,tidal)
Further reading:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tidal_tail
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1992AJ....103.1089B/abstract

Referenced by pages:
galactic tide
galaxy classification
galaxy merger
polar-ring galaxy
stellar stream

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