1. WALLABY Pilot Survey: The diversity of HI structural parameters in nearby galaxies
- Author
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Reynolds, T. N., Catinella, B., Cortese, L., Deg, N., Denes, H., Elagali, A., For, B. -Q., Kamphuis, P., Kleiner, D., Koribalski, B. S., Lee-Waddell, K., Murugeshan, C., Raja, W., Rhee, J., Spekkens, K., Staveley-Smith, L., van der Hulst, J. M., Wang, J., Westmeier, T., Wong, O. I., Bigiel, F., Bosma, A., Holwerda, B. W., Leahy, D. A., and Meyer, M. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the diversity in the sizes and average surface densities of the neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) gas discs in ~280 nearby galaxies detected by the Widefield ASKAP L-band Legacy All-sky Blind Survey (WALLABY). We combine the uniformly observed, interferometric HI data from pilot observations of the Hydra cluster and NGC 4636 group fields with photometry measured from ultraviolet, optical and near-infrared imaging surveys to investigate the interplay between stellar structure, star formation and HI structural parameters. We quantify the HI structure by the size of the HI relative to the optical disc and the average HI surface density measured using effective and isodensity radii. For galaxies resolved by >1.3 beams, we find that galaxies with higher stellar masses and stellar surface densities tend to have less extended HI discs and lower HI surface densities: the isodensity HI structural parameters show a weak negative dependence on stellar mass and stellar mass surface density. These trends strengthen when we limit our sample to galaxies resolved by >2 beams. We find that galaxies with higher HI surface densities and more extended HI discs tend to be more star forming: the isodensity HI structural parameters have stronger correlations with star formation. Normalising the HI disc size by the optical effective radius (instead of the isophotal radius) produces positive correlations with stellar masses and stellar surface densities and removes the correlations with star formation. This is due to the effective and isodensity HI radii increasing with mass at similar rates while, in the optical, the effective radius increases slower than the isophotal radius. Our results demonstrate that with WALLABY we can begin to bridge the gap between small galaxy samples with high spatial resolution HI data and large, statistical studies using spatially unresolved, single-dish data., Comment: 16 page, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
- Published
- 2023
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