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We present the results of deep imaging and spectroscopic observations of very extended ionized gas (EIG) around four member galaxies of the Coma cluster of galaxies: RB199, IC4040, GMP2923 and GMP3071. The EIGs were serendipitously found in an H-alph a narrow band imaging survey of the central region of the Coma cluster. The relative radial velocities of the EIGs with respect to the systemic velocities of the parent galaxies from which they emanate increase almost monotonically with the distance from the nucleus of the respective galaxies, reaching -400 - -800 km/s at around 40 - 80 kpc from the galaxies. The one-sided morphologies and the velocity fields of the EIGs are consistent with the predictions of numerical simulations of ram pressure stripping. We found a very low-velocity filament (v_rel = -1300 km/s) at the southeastern edge of the disk of IC4040. Some bright compact knots in the EIGs of RB199 and IC4040 exhibit blue continuum and strong H-alpha emission. The equivalent widths of the H-alpha emission exceed 200 A, and are greater than 1000 A for some knots. The emission line intensity ratios of the knots are basically consistent with those of sub-solar abundance HII regions. These facts indicate that intensive star formation occurs in the knots. Some filaments, including the low velocity filament of the IC4040 EIG, exhibit shock-like emission line spectra, suggesting that shock heating plays an important role in ionization and excitation of the EIGs.
We found an unusual complex of narrow blue filaments, bright blue knots, and H-alpha emitting filaments and clouds, which morphologically resembled a complex of ``fireballs, extending up to 80 kpc south from an E+A galaxy RB199 in the Coma cluster. T he galaxy has a highly disturbed morphology indicative of a galaxy--galaxy merger remnant. The narrow blue filaments extend in straight shapes toward the south from the galaxy, and several bright blue knots are located at the southern ends of the filaments. The Rc band absolute magnitudes, half light radii and estimated masses of the bright knots are -12 - -13 mag, 200 - 300 pc and 10^6-7 Msolar, respectively. Long, narrow H-alpha emitting filaments are connected at the south edge of the knots. The average color of the fireballs is B - Rc = 0.5, which is bluer than RB199 (B - R = 0.99), suggesting that most of the stars in the fireballs were formed within several times 10^8 yr. The narrow blue filaments exhibit almost no H-alpha emission. Strong H-alpha and UV emission appear in the bright knots. These characteristics indicate that star formation recently ceased in the blue filaments and now continues in the bright knots. The gas stripped by some mechanism from the disk of RB199 may be traveling in the intergalactic space, forming stars left along its trajectory. The most plausible fireball formation mechanism is ram pressure stripping by high-speed collision between the galaxy and the hot intra-cluster medium. The fireballs may be a snapshot of diffuse intra-cluster population formation, or halo star population formation in a cluster galaxy.
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