Back to Search Start Over

HI observations of the MATLAS dwarf and ultra-diffuse galaxies

Authors :
Poulain, Melina
Marleau, Francine R.
Habas, Rebecca
Duc, Pierre-Alain
Sanchez-Janssen, Ruben
Durrell, Patrick R.
Paudel, Sanjaya
Mueller, Oliver
Lim, Sungsoon
Bilek, Michal
Fensch, Jeremy
Source :
A&A 659, A14 (2022)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The presence of HI gas in galaxies is inextricably linked to their morphology and evolution. This paper aims to understand the HI content of the already identified 2210 dwarfs located in the low-to-moderate density environments of the MATLAS deep imaging survey. We combine the HI observations from the ATLAS$^{3D}$ survey, with the extragalactic HI sources from the ALFALFA survey, to extract the HI line width, velocity and mass of the MATLAS dwarfs. From the 1773 dwarfs in our sample with available HI observations, 8% (145) have an HI line detection. The majority of the dwarfs show irregular morphology, while 29% (42) are ellipticals, the largest sample of HI-bearing dwarf ellipticals (dEs) to date. Of the HI dwarf sample, 2% (3) are ultra-diffuse galaxies (UDGs), 12% have a transition-type morphology, 5% are tidal dwarf candidates, and 10% appear to be disrupted objects. In our optically selected sample, 9.5% of the dEs, 7% of the UDGs and 10% of the classical dwarfs are HI-bearing. The HI-bearing dwarfs have on average bluer colors than the dwarfs without detected HI. We find relations between the stellar and HI masses, gas fraction, color and absolute magnitude consistent with previous studies of dwarfs probing similar masses and environments. For 79% of the dwarfs identified as satellites of massive early-type galaxies, we find that the HI mass increases with the projected distance to the host. Using the HI line width, we estimate dynamical masses and find that 5% (7) of the dwarfs are dark matter deficient.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
A&A 659, A14 (2022)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2111.14491
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202142012