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MIGHTEE-HI: the HI Size-Mass relation over the last billion years

Authors :
Rajohnson, Sambatriniaina H. A.
Frank, Bradley S.
Ponomareva, Anastasia A.
Maddox, Natasha
Kraan-Korteweg, Renée C.
Jarvis, Matt J.
Adams, Elizabeth A. K.
Oosterloo, Tom
Baes, Maarten
Spekkens, Kristine
Adams, Nathan J.
Glowacki, Marcin
Kurapati, Sushma
Prandoni, Isabella
Heywood, Ian
Collier, Jordan D.
Sekhar, Srikrishna
Taylor, Russ
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We present the observed HI size-mass relation of $204$ galaxies from the MIGHTEE Survey Early Science data. The high sensitivity of MeerKAT allows us to detect galaxies spanning more than 4 orders of magnitude in HI mass, ranging from dwarf galaxies to massive spirals, and including all morphological types. This is the first time the relation has been explored on a blind homogeneous data set which extends over a previously unexplored redshift range of $0 < z < 0.084$, i.e. a period of around one billion years in cosmic time. The sample follows the same tight logarithmic relation derived from previous work, between the diameter ($D_{\rm HI}$) and the mass ($M_{\rm HI}$) of HI discs. We measure a slope of $0.501\pm 0.008$, an intercept of $-3.252^{+0.073}_{-0.074}$, and an observed scatter of $0.057$ dex. For the first time, we quantify the intrinsic scatter of $0.054 \pm 0.003$ dex (${\sim} 10 \%$), which provides a constraint for cosmological simulations of galaxy formation and evolution. We derive the relation as a function of galaxy type and find that their intrinsic scatters and slopes are consistent within the errors. We also calculate the $D_{\rm HI} - M_{\rm HI}$ relation for two redshift bins and do not find any evidence for evolution with redshift. These results suggest that over a period of one billion years in lookback time, galaxy discs have not undergone significant evolution in their gas distribution and mean surface mass density, indicating a lack of dependence on both morphological type and redshift.<br />Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2203.06149
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac693