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A Catalog of H [CSC]i[/CSC]–selected Galaxies from the South Celestial Cap Region of Sky

Authors :
Rachel L. Webster
Kenneth C. Freeman
P. J. Boyce
R. M. Price
Mary E. Putman
P. A. Henning
Alan E. Wright
Elaine M. Sadler
Ron Ekers
Baerbel Koribalski
Ian M. Stewart
Tom Oosterloo
Brad K. Gibson
F. Stootman
Glen B. Banks
R. Bhathal
Stuart D. Ryder
Michael J. Drinkwater
Jeremy Mould
W. J. G. de Blok
P. M. Knezek
J. C. O'Brien
D. F. Malin
P. F. Ortiz
M. Marquarding
David G. Barnes
Virginia A. Kilborn
Helmut Jerjen
Lister Staveley-Smith
M. Howlett
M. J. Disney
O. I. Wong
Robert F. Minchin
Source :
The Astronomical Journal. 124:690-705
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
American Astronomical Society, 2002.

Abstract

The first deep catalog of the H I Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) is presented, covering the south celestial cap (SCC) region. The SCC area is similar to2400 deg(2) and covers delta < -62D. The average rms noise for the survey is 13 mJy beam(-1). Five hundred thirty-six galaxies have been cataloged according to their neutral hydrogen content, including 114 galaxies that have no previous cataloged optical counterpart. This is the largest sample of galaxies from a blind H I survey to date. Most galaxies in optically unobscured regions of sky have a visible optical counterpart; however, there is a small population of low-velocity H I clouds without visible optical counterparts whose origins and significance are unclear. The rms accuracy of the HIPASS positions is found to be 1.'9. The H I mass range of galaxies detected is from S10(6) to S10(11) M-.. There are a large number of late-type spiral galaxies in the SCC sample (66%), compared with 30% for optically selected galaxies from the same region in the NASA Extragalactic Database. The average ratio of H I mass to B luminosity of the sample increases according to optical type, from 1.8 M-./L-. for early types to 3.2 M-./L-. for late-type galaxies. The H I-detected galaxies tend to follow the large-scale structure traced by galaxies found in optical surveys. From the number of galaxies detected in this region of sky, we predict the full HIPASS catalog will contain S5000 galaxies, to a peak flux density limit of S39 mJy (3 σ), although this may be a conservative estimate as two large voids are present in the region. The H I mass function for this catalog is presented in a subsequent paper.

Details

ISSN :
15383881 and 00046256
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Astronomical Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........26a0085883eead1ba8c6efef4589d2ab