Quantified Morphology of HI Disks in the Universe
B. W. Holwerda (1), W. J. G. de Blok (1), A. Bouchard (1), S-L. Blyth, (1), K. van der Heyden (1), N. Prizkal (2) ((1) University of Cape Town, (2), Space Telescope Science Institute)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that HI disk morphology parameters effectively trace galaxy interactions and can be used with upcoming radio telescope data, offering a new way to study galaxy evolution across cosmic time.
Contribution
It introduces the application of optical morphology parameters to HI data, showing their effectiveness in identifying galaxy interactions in radio observations.
Findings
HI morphology parameters are as effective or better than optical in tracing interactions.
Parameters like Asymmetry, Gini, and M20 are promising for HI data analysis.
Potential to adapt these parameters for data-cubes in future surveys.
Abstract
he upcoming new perspective of the high redshift Universe in the 21 cm line of atomic hydrogen opens possibilities to explore topics of spiral disk evolution, hitherto reserved for the optical regime. The growth of spiral gas disks over Cosmic time can be explored with the new generation of radio telescopes, notably the SKA, and its precursors, as accurately as with the Hubble Space Telescope for stellar disks. Since the atomic hydrogen gas is the building block of these disks, it should trace their formation accurately. Morphology of HI disks can now equally be quantified over Cosmic time. In studies of HST deep fields, the optical or UV morphology of high-redshift galaxy disks have been characterized using a few quantities: concentration (C), asymmetry (A), smoothness (S), second-order-moment (M20), the GINI coefficient (G), and Ellipticity (E). We have applied these parameters across…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
