HI clouds in the proximity of M33
M. Grossi, C. Giovanardi, E. Corbelli, R. Giovanelli, M.P. Haynes,, A.M. Martin, A. Saintonge, J.D. Dowell

TL;DR
This study searches for neutral hydrogen clouds around M33, revealing about 50% of detected HI mass is in clouds potentially linked to the galaxy, and discusses their possible origins and implications for star formation.
Contribution
First detailed survey of HI clouds around M33 combining wide and deep observations, exploring their origins and impact on galaxy evolution.
Findings
Detected approximately 10^7 solar masses of HI around M33.
About half of the HI mass is in clouds related to M33 in space and velocity.
Predicted total gas mass > 5 x 10^7 solar masses, fueling star formation.
Abstract
Neutral hydrogen clouds are found in the Milky Way and Andromeda halo both as large complexes and smaller isolated clouds. Here we present a search for Hi clouds in the halo of M33, the third spiral galaxy of the Local Group. We have used two complementary data sets: a 3^o x 3^o map of the area provided by the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) survey and deeper pointed observations carried out with the Arecibo telescope in two fields that permit sampling of the north eastern and south-western edges of the HI disc. The total amount of Hi around M33 detected by our survey is M. At least 50% of this mass is made of HI clouds that are related both in space and velocity to the galaxy. We discuss several scenarios for the origin of these clouds focusing on the two most interesting ones: dark-matter dominated gaseous satellites, debris from filaments flowing…
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