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A search for HI absorption has been made in 23 radio galaxies using the ATCA, the VLA and the WSRT. In five galaxies HI absorption was detected. We investigate how the detection rate is distributed among galaxies with different radio and optical properties. Among the Fanaroff-Riley (FR) type I radio galaxies, only one object (10% of total) was detected. The HI absorption in these objects is likely to come from a nuclear disk, as found for other galaxies of this type. The low detection rate is consistent with the hypothesis (as suggested by optical and X-ray data) that the ``standard pc scale, geometrically thick torus is not required in low-luminosity radio galaxies. In the case of FR type-II powerful radio galaxies, no HI absorption has been detected in broad line radio galaxies, while three out of four narrow-line radio galaxies have been detected (the one non-detection having quite a high upper limit). All these are compact or small radio galaxies. To first order this is consistent with the predictions of the unified schemes, assuming that the HI absorption is due to an obscuring torus. However, the indications of this being the only cause of the absorption are not very strong. In particular, we find that in two of the three detected objects that the HI is blueshifted compared to the systemic velocity. In the third galaxy (PKS 1549-79) two redshift systems (from the optical lines) are found. The uncertainty in the systemic velocity derived from optical lines is discussed. Finally, we find a tendency for radio galaxies with a strong component of young stellar population and far-IR emission to show HI absorption. The overall richer ISM that is likely to be present in these galaxies may be a factor in producing the absorption.
We present a study, done with the Australian LBA, of HI absorption for two compact radio galaxies (PKS 1549-79 and PKS 1814-63). In both the radio galaxies, the HI appears to give us information about the environment in which the radio sources are em
This review summarises what we have learnt in the last two decades based on HI 21-cm absorption observations about the cold interstellar medium (ISM) in the central regions of active galaxies and the interplay between this gas and the active nucleus
Using archival data from the HI Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) we have searched for 21 cm line absorption in 204 nearby radio and star-forming galaxies with continuum flux densities greater than $S_{1.4} approx 250$ mJy within the redshift range $0 <
We present results from a search for 21 cm associated HI absorption in a sample of 29 radio sources selected from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz survey. Observations were conducted using the Australia Telescope Compact Array Broadband Backend, with w
We use observations from the CASTLES survey of gravitational lenses to study extinction in 23 lens galaxies with $0 < z_l < 1$. The median differential extinction between lensed images is $Delta E(bv) = 0.05$ mag, and the directly measured extinction