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Conference Paper: Properties of galaxies found in a deep multibeam survey for extragalactic neutral hydrogen: HIDEEP

TitleProperties of galaxies found in a deep multibeam survey for extragalactic neutral hydrogen: HIDEEP
Authors
Issue Date1-Jul-2002
PublisherAmerican Astronomical Society
Abstract

We have carried out a deep 21-cm blind survey of a 4 by 8 degree region in Centaurus using the Parkes multibeam system. The noise continues to fall as the square-root of the integration time throughout, making this the deepest such survey to date, reaching a potential neutral hydrogen (HI) column-density limit of 0.03 solar masses per square parsec integrated over a velocity width of 200 km/s. We find 173 sources out to the bandpass limit of 12,700 km/s. The HI observations were accompanied by a deep optical survey on the UK Schmidt Telescope, stacking eight 1-hour R-band plates to reach an isophotal limit of 26.5 R mag per square arcsec. All the sources appear to have optical counterparts. The surface-brightness distribution is significantly different from that derived from the ESO-LV, containing significantly more galaxies at lower surface-brightnesses despite the peak of the distribution being in the same place. When a volumetric correction is made, the surface-brightness distribution is flat down to the end of the data at an effective R-band surface-brightness of 25 R mag per square arcsec. The bivariate brightness distribution in the surface-brightness - luminosity plane appears fairly uniform except that we find no giant low surface-brightness galaxies (such as Malin 1). There is indirect evidence, based on the optical radii, that there are no low column-density galaxies in the sample, despite our being sensitive to such systems. We estimate the contribution of gas-rich low surface-brightness galaxies to the global averages as a percentage of the contribution of all gas-rich galaxies. This gives us the result that low surface-brightness galaxies contribute 8.3 +/- 4.7% of the light, 15 +/- 9% of the baryon density, 25 +/- 15% of the dynamical mass-density and 30 +/- 17% of the neutral hydrogen density.


Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/342839
ISSN

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorMinchin, R-
dc.contributor.authorDisney, M-
dc.contributor.authorBoyce, P-
dc.contributor.authorBanks, G-
dc.contributor.authorde Blok, W-
dc.contributor.authorParker, Q-
dc.contributor.authorHIDEEP Team,-
dc.date.accessioned2024-05-02T03:06:15Z-
dc.date.available2024-05-02T03:06:15Z-
dc.date.issued2002-07-01-
dc.identifier.issn0002-7537-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/342839-
dc.description.abstract<p>We have carried out a deep 21-cm blind survey of a 4 by 8 degree region in Centaurus using the Parkes multibeam system. The noise continues to fall as the square-root of the integration time throughout, making this the deepest such survey to date, reaching a potential neutral hydrogen (HI) column-density limit of 0.03 solar masses per square parsec integrated over a velocity width of 200 km/s. We find 173 sources out to the bandpass limit of 12,700 km/s. The HI observations were accompanied by a deep optical survey on the UK Schmidt Telescope, stacking eight 1-hour R-band plates to reach an isophotal limit of 26.5 R mag per square arcsec. All the sources appear to have optical counterparts. The surface-brightness distribution is significantly different from that derived from the ESO-LV, containing significantly more galaxies at lower surface-brightnesses despite the peak of the distribution being in the same place. When a volumetric correction is made, the surface-brightness distribution is flat down to the end of the data at an effective R-band surface-brightness of 25 R mag per square arcsec. The bivariate brightness distribution in the surface-brightness - luminosity plane appears fairly uniform except that we find no giant low surface-brightness galaxies (such as Malin 1). There is indirect evidence, based on the optical radii, that there are no low column-density galaxies in the sample, despite our being sensitive to such systems. We estimate the contribution of gas-rich low surface-brightness galaxies to the global averages as a percentage of the contribution of all gas-rich galaxies. This gives us the result that low surface-brightness galaxies contribute 8.3 +/- 4.7% of the light, 15 +/- 9% of the baryon density, 25 +/- 15% of the dynamical mass-density and 30 +/- 17% of the neutral hydrogen density.</p>-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherAmerican Astronomical Society-
dc.relation.ispartofBulletin of the American Astronomical Society-
dc.titleProperties of galaxies found in a deep multibeam survey for extragalactic neutral hydrogen: HIDEEP-
dc.typeConference_Paper-
dc.identifier.volume34-
dc.identifier.eissn0002-7537-
dc.identifier.issnl0002-7537-

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