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Extragalactic starbursts induced by gravitational interactions can now be studied from z = ~0 to ~2. The evidence that mergers of gas-rich galaxies tend to trigger galaxy-wide starbursts is strong, both statistically and in individual cases of major disk-disk mergers. Star formation rates appear enhanced by factors of a few to ~10^3 above normal. Detailed studies of nearby mergers and ULIRGs suggest that the main trigger for starbursts is the rapidly mounting pressure of the ISM in extended shock regions, rather than high- velocity, ~50 - 100 km/s cloud-cloud collisions. Numerical simulations demonstrate that in colliding galaxies the star formation rate depends not only on the gas density, but crucially also on energy dissipation in shocks. An often overlooked characteristic of merger-induced starbursts is that the spatial distribution of the enhanced star formation extends over large scales (~10 - 20 kpc). Thus, although most such starbursts do peak near the galactic centers, young stellar populations pervade merger remnants and explain why (1) age gradients in descendent galaxies are mild and (2) resultant cluster systems are far-flung. This review presents an overview of interesting phenomena observed in galaxy-wide starbursts and emphasizes that such events continue to accompany the birth of elliptical galaxies to the present epoch.
We employ numerical simulations of galaxy mergers to explore the effect of galaxy mass ratio on merger--driven starbursts. Our numerical simulations include radiative cooling of gas, star formation, and stellar feedback to follow the interaction and
High resolution (0.4 arcsec) Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Cycle 0 observations of HCO+(4-3) and HCN(4-3) toward a mid-stage infrared bright merger VV114 have revealed compact nuclear (<200 pc) and extended (3 - 4 kpc) dense gas
We present spatially resolved integral field spectroscopic K-band data at a resolution of 0.13 (60pc) and interferometric CO(2-1) line observations of the prototypical merging system NGC6240. Despite the clear rotational signature, the stellar kinema
We present low-resolution absorption-line spectra of three candidate close ( < 3 arcsec) companions to the low redshift QSOs 3CR 323.1, PG 1700+518, and PKS 2135-147. The spectra were obtained with LRIS on the Keck telescopes and with the Faint Objec
Observational studies have revealed that galaxy pairs tend to have lower gas-phase metallicity than isolated galaxies. This metallicity deficiency can be caused by inflows of low-metallicity gas due to the tidal forces and gravitational torques assoc