HI and star formation in the most metal-deficient galaxies
Ekta, Jayaram N. Chengalur, S. A. Pustilnik

TL;DR
This study uses GMRT observations to analyze the HI morphology and kinematics of the most metal-deficient star-forming galaxies, revealing irregular gas distributions likely caused by interactions or mergers, and examining their star formation triggers.
Contribution
It provides new HI observations of extremely metal-deficient galaxies, highlighting their irregular gas structures and potential interaction-driven star formation, advancing understanding of early galaxy evolution.
Findings
Galaxies exhibit irregular HI morphologies and kinematics.
Star formation likely triggered by interactions or mergers.
Threshold HI density (~10^{21} atoms cm^{-2}) similar to higher metallicity galaxies.
Abstract
We present Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT) observations for three (viz., DDO 68, SDSS J2104-0035 and UGC 772) of the six most metal-deficient actively star-forming galaxies known. Although there is a debate as to whether these galaxies are undergoing their first episode of star formation or not, they are `young' in the sense that their ISM is chemically unevolved. In this regard, they are the nearest equivalents of young galaxies in the early Universe. All three galaxies, that we have observed, have irregular HI morphologies and kinematics, which we interpret as either due to tidal interaction with neighbouring galaxies, or the consequences of a recent merger. The remaining three of the six most metal-deficient galaxies are also known to have highly disturbed HI distributions and are interacting. It is interesting because these galaxies were chosen solely on the basis of their…
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