New Lessons from the HI Size-Mass Relation of Galaxies (1605.01489v1)
Abstract: We revisit the HI size-mass (D${\rm HI}$-M${\rm HI}$) relation of galaxies with a sample of more than 500 nearby galaxies covering over five orders of magnitude in HI mass and more than ten $B$-band magnitudes. The relation is remarkably tight with a scatter $\sigma \sim$0.06 dex, or 14%. The scatter does not change as a function of galaxy luminosity, HI richness or morphological type. The relation is linked to the fact that dwarf and spiral galaxies have a homogenous radial profile of HI surface density in the outer regions when the radius is normalised by D${\rm HI}$. The early-type disk galaxies typically have shallower HI radial profiles, indicating a different gas accretion history. We argue that the process of atomic-to-molecular gas conversion or star formation cannot explain the tightness of the D${\rm HI}$-M$_{\rm HI}$ relation. This simple relation puts strong constraints on simulation models for galaxy formation.
Collections
Sign up for free to add this paper to one or more collections.
Paper Prompts
Sign up for free to create and run prompts on this paper using GPT-5.