ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

HI gas content of SDSS galaxies revealed by ALFALFA: implications for the mass-metallicity relation and the environmental dependence of HI in the local Universe

137   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Ying Zu
 تاريخ النشر 2018
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English
 تأليف Ying Zu




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

The neutral hydrogen~(HI) gas is an important barometer of recent star formation and metal enrichment activities in galaxies. I develop a novel statistical method for predicting the HI-to-stellar mass ratio $f_{gas}$ of galaxies from their stellar mass and optical colour, and apply it to a volume-limited galaxy sample jointly observed by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA survey. I eliminate the impact of the Malmquist bias against HI-deficient systems on the $f_{gas}$ predictor by properly accounting for the HI detection probability of each galaxy in the analysis. The best-fitting $f_{gas}$ predictor, with an estimated scatter of $0.272$ dex, provides excellent description to the observed HI mass function. After defining an HI excess parameter as the deviation of the observed $f_{gas}$ from the expected value, I confirm that there exists a strong secondary dependence of the mass-metallicity relation on HI excess. By further examining the 2D metallicity distribution on the specific star formation rate vs. HI excess plane, I show that the metallicity dependence on HI is likely more fundamental than that on specific star formation rate. In addition, I find that the environmental dependence of HI in the local Universe can be effectively described by the cross-correlation coefficient between HI excess and the red galaxy overdensity $rho_{cc}{=}-0.18$. This weak anti-correlation also successfully explains the observed dependence of HI clustering on $f_{gas}$. My method provides a useful framework for learning HI gas evolution from the synergy between future HI and optical galaxy surveys.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

Using a sample of dwarf galaxies observed using the VIMOS IFU on the VLT, we investigate the mass-metallicity relation (MZR) as a function of star formation rate (FMR$_{text{SFR}}$) as well as HI-gas mass (FMR$_{text{HI}}$). We combine our IFU data w ith a subsample of galaxies from the ALFALFA HI survey crossmatched to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to study the FMR$_{text{SFR}}$ and FMR$_{text{HI}}$ across the stellar mass range 10$^{6.6}$ to 10$^{8.8}$ M$_odot$, with metallicities as low as 12+log(O/H) = 7.67. We find the 1$sigma$ mean scatter in the MZR to be 0.05 dex. The 1$sigma$ mean scatter in the FMR$_{text{SFR}}$ (0.02 dex) is significantly lower than that of the MZR. The FMR$_{text{SFR}}$ is not consistent between the IFU observed galaxies and the ALFALFA/SDSS galaxies for SFRs lower than 10$^{-2.4}$ M$_odot$ yr$^{-1}$, however this could be the result of limitations of our measurements in that regime. The lowest mean scatter (0.01 dex) is found in the FMR$_{text{HI}}$. We also find that the FMR$_{text{HI}}$ is consistent between the IFU observed dwarf galaxies and the ALFALFA/SDSS crossmatched sample. We introduce the fundamental metallicity luminosity counterpart to the FMR, again characterized in terms of SFR (FML$_{text{SFR}}$) and HI-gas mass (FML$_{text{HI}}$). We find that the FML$_{text{HI}}$ relation is consistent between the IFU observed dwarf galaxy sample and the larger ALFALFA/SDSS sample. However the 1$sigma$ scatter for the FML$_{text{HI}}$ relation is not improved over the FMR$_{text{HI}}$ scenario. This leads us to conclude that the FMR$_{text{HI}}$ is the best candidate for a physically motivated fundamental metallicity relation.
We present the HI content of galaxies in nearby groups and clusters as measured by the 70% complete Arecibo Legacy Fast-ALFA (ALFALFA) survey, including constraints from ALFALFA detection limits. Our sample includes 22 systems at distances between 70 -160 Mpc over the mass range 12.5<log M/M_sun<15.0, for a total of 1986 late-type galaxies. We find that late-type galaxies in the centers of groups lack HI at fixed stellar mass relative to the regions surrounding them. Larger groups show evidence of a stronger dependence of HI properties on environment, despite a similar dependence of color on environment at fixed stellar mass. We compare several environment variables to determine which is the best predictor of galaxy properties; group-centric distance r and r/R_200 are similarly effective predictors, while local density is slightly more effective and group size and halo mass are slightly less effective. While both central and satellite galaxies in the blue cloud exhibit a significant dependence of HI content on local density, only centrals show a strong dependence on stellar mass, and only satellites show a strong dependence on halo mass. Finally, we see evidence that HI is deficient for blue cloud galaxies in denser environments even when both stellar mass and color are fixed. This is consistent with a picture where HI is removed or destroyed, followed by reddening within the blue cloud. Our results support the existence of pre-processing in isolated groups, along with an additional rapid mechanism for gas removal within larger groups and clusters, perhaps ram-pressure stripping.
We perform a stacking analysis of the HI spectra from the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey for optically-selected local galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to study the average gas fraction of galaxies at fixed stellar mass ($M _*$) and star formation rate (SFR). We first confirm that the average gas fraction strongly depends on the stellar mass and SFR of host galaxies; massive galaxies tend to have a lower gas fraction, and actively star-forming galaxies show higher gas fraction, which is consistent with many previous studies. Then we investigate the morphological dependence of the HI gas mass fraction at fixed $M_*$ and SFR to minimize the effects of these parameters. We use three morphological classifications based on parametric indicator (S{e}rsic index), non-parametric indicator (C-index), and visual inspection (smoothness from the Galaxy Zoo 2 project) on the optical image. We find that there is no significant morphological dependence of the HI gas mass fraction at fixed $M_*$ and SFR when we use C-index. In comparison, there exists a hint of diminishment in the HI gas mass fraction for smooth galaxies compared with non-smooth galaxies. We find that the visual smoothness is sensitive to the existence of small-scale structures in a galaxy. Our result suggests that even at fixed $M_*$ and SFR, the presence of such small-scale structures (seen in the optical image) is linked to their total HI gas content.
We use a stacking technique to measure the average HI content of a volume-limited sample of 1871 AGN host galaxies from a parent sample of galaxies selected from the SDSS and GALEX imaging surveys with stellar masses greater than 10^10 M_sun and reds hifts in the range 0.025<z<0.05. HI data are available from the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey. In previous work, we found that the HI gas fraction in galaxies correlates most strongly with the combination of optical/UV colour and stellar surface mass density. We therefore build a control sample of non-AGN matched to the AGN hosts in these two properties. We study trends in HI gas mass fraction (M(HI)/M_*), where M_* is the stellar mass) as a function of black hole accretion rate indicator L[OIII]/M(BH). We find no significant difference in HI content between AGN and control samples at all values of black hole accretion rate probed by the galaxies in our sample. This indicates that AGN do not influence the large-scale gaseous properties of galaxies in the local Universe. We have studied the variation in HI mass fraction with black hole accretion rate in the blue and red galaxy populations. In the blue population, the HI gas fraction is independent of accretion rate, indicating that accretion is not sensitive to the properties of the interstellar medium of the galaxy on large scales. However, in the red population accretion rate and gas fraction do correlate. The measured gas fractions in this population are not too different from the ones expected from a stellar mass loss origin, implying that the fuel supply in the red AGN population could be a mixture of mass loss from stars and gas present in disks.
We use the EAGLE suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to study how the HI content of present-day galaxies depends on their environment. We show that EAGLE reproduces observed HI mass-environment trends very well, while semi-analytic model s typically overpredict the average HI masses in dense environments. The environmental processes act primarily as an on/off switch for the HI content of satellites with stellar mass Mstar>10^9 Msun. At a fixed Mstar, the fraction of HI-depleted satellites increases with increasing host halo mass M200 in response to stronger environmental effects, while at a fixed M200 it decreases with increasing satellite Mstar as the gas is confined by deeper gravitational potentials. HI-depleted satellites reside mostly, but not exclusively, within the virial radius r200 of their host halo. We investigate the origin of these trends by focussing on three environmental mechanisms: ram pressure stripping by the intra-group medium, tidal stripping by the host halo, and satellite-satellite encounters. By tracking back in time the evolution of the HI-depleted satellites, we find that the most common cause of HI removal is satellite encounters. The timescale for HI removal is typically less than 0.5 Gyr. Tidal stripping occurs in halos of M200<10^{14} Msun within half r200, while the other processes act also in more massive halos, generally within r200. Conversely, we find that ram pressure stripping is the most common mechanism that disturbs the HI morphology of galaxies at redshift z=0. This implies that HI removal due to satellite-satellite interactions occurs on shorter timescales than the other processes.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا