No Arabic abstract
Young stars in the disks of galaxies produce HI from their parent H2 clouds by photodissociation. This paper describes the observational evidence for and the morphology of such HI. Simple estimates of the amount of dissociated gas lead to the startling conclusion that much, and perhaps even all, of the HI in galaxy disks can be produced in this way.
Young stars in the disks of galaxies produce HI from their parent H2 clouds by photodissociation. This process is widespread in late-type galaxies, and follows the distribution of Far-UV photons produced primarily by B-type stars. An estimate of the amount of dissociated gas can be made using observed Far-UV fluxes and simple approximations for the physics of photodissociation. This leads to the startling conclusion that much, and perhaps even all, of the HI in galaxy disks can be produced in this way. This result offers a simple, but inverse, cause-effect explanation for the ``Schmidt Law of Global Star Formation in galaxies.
We introduce the Bluedisk project, a large program at the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) that has mapped the HI in a sample of 23 nearby galaxies with unusually high HI mass fractions, along with a similar-sized sample of control galaxies matched in stellar mass, size, inclination and redshift. This paper presents the sample selection, observational set-up, data reduction strategy, and a first analysis of the sizes and structural properties of the HI disks. We find that the HI-rich galaxies lie on the same HI mass versus HI size relation as normal spiral galaxies, extending it to total HI masses of $2 times 10^{10} M_{odot}$ and radii R1 of $sim 100$ kpc (where R1 is defined as the radius where the HI column density reaches 1 $M_{odot}$ pc$^{-2}$). HI-rich galaxies have significantly larger values of HI-to-optical size ratio at fixed stellar mass, concentration index, stellar and star formation rate surface density compared to the control sample. The disks of HI-rich galaxies are also significantly more clumpy (i.e. have higher HI Gini and $Delta$Area coefficient) than those of normal spirals. There is no evidence that the disks of HI-rich galaxies are more disturbed: HI-rich galaxies exhibit no difference with respect to control samples in their distributions of HI asymmetry indices or optical/HI disk position angle differences. In fact, the center of the HI distribution corresponds more closely with the center of the optical light in the HI-rich galaxies than in the controls. All these results argue against a scenario in which new gas has been brought in by mergers. It is possible that they may be more consistent with cooling from a surrounding quasi-static halo of warm/hot gas.
The gas at the surfaces of molecular clouds in galaxies is heated and dissociated by photons from young stars both near and far. HI resulting from the dissociation of molecular hydrogen H2 emits hyperfine line emission at 21 cm, and warmed CO emits dipole rotational lines such as the 2.6 mm line of CO(1-0). We use previously developed models for photodissociation regions (PDRs) to compute the intensities of these HI and CO(1-0) lines as a function of the total volume density n in the cloud and the far ultraviolet flux G0 incident upon it and present the results in units familiar to observers. The intensities of these two lines behave differently with changing physical conditions in the PDR, and, taken together, the two lines can provide a ground-based radio astronomy diagnostic for determining n and G0 separately in distant molecular clouds. This diagnostic is particularly useful in the range Gzero <~ 100, 10 cm^{-3} <~ n <~ 10^5 cm^{-3}, which applies to a large fraction of the volume of the interstellar medium in galaxies. If the molecular cloud is located near discrete sources of far-UV (FUV) emission, the PDR-generated HI and CO(1-0) emission on the cloud surface can be more easily identified, appearing as layered ``blankets or ``blisters on the side of the cloud nearest to the FUV source. As an illustration, we consider the Galactic object G216 -2.5, i.e. ``Maddalenas Cloud, which has been previously identified as a large PDR in the Galaxy. We determine that this cloud has n ~ 200 cm^{-3}, G0 ~ 0.8, consistent with other data.
We present a simple analytic procedure for generating atomic-to-molecular (HI-to-H$_2$) density profiles for optically thick clouds illuminated by far-ultraviolet radiation. Our procedure is based on the analytic theory for the structure of one-dimensional HI/H$_2$ photon-dominated regions, presented by Sternberg et al. (2014). Depth-dependent HI and H$_2$ density fractions may be computed for arbitrary gas density, far-ultraviolet field intensity, and the metallicity dependent H$_2$ formation rate coefficient, and dust absorption cross section. We use our procedure to generate a set of HI-to-H$_2$ transition profiles for a wide range of conditions, from the weak- to strong-field limits, and from super-solar down to low metallicities. We show that if presented as functions of dust optical depth the HI and H$_2$ density profiles depend primarily on the Sternberg $alpha G$ parameter (dimensionless) that determines the dust optical depth associated with the total photodissociated HI column. We derive a universal analytic formula for the HI-to-H$_2$ transition points as a function of just $alpha G$. Our formula will be useful for interpreting emission-line observations of HI/H$_2$ interfaces, for estimating star-formation thresholds, and for sub-grid components in hydrodynamics simulations.
The HI in disk galaxies frequently extends beyond the optical image, and can trace the dark matter there. I briefly highlight the history of high spatial resolution HI imaging, the contribution it made to the dark matter problem, and the current tension between several dynamical methods to break the disk-halo degeneracy. I then turn to the flaring problem, which could in principle probe the shape of the dark halo. Instead, however, a lot of attention is now devoted to understanding the role of gas accretion via galactic fountains. The current $rm Lambda$ cold dark matter theory has problems on galactic scales, such as the core-cusp problem, which can be addressed with HI observations of dwarf galaxies. For a similar range in rotation velocities, galaxies of type Sd have thin disks, while those of type Im are much thicker. After a few comments on modified Newtonian dynamics and on irregular galaxies, I close with statistics on the HI extent of galaxies.