Outlying HII Regions in HI-Selected Galaxies
J. K. Werk, M. E. Putman, G. R. Meurer, E. V. Ryan-Weber, C. Kehrig,, D. A. Thilker, J. Bland-Hawthorn, M. J. Drinkwater, R. C. Kennicutt, O. I., Wong, K. C. Freeman, M. S. Oey, M. A. Dopita, M. T. Doyle, H. C. Ferguson, D., J. Hanish, T. M. Heckman, V. A. Kilborn, J. H. Kim

TL;DR
This study systematically searches for outlying HII regions in HI-selected galaxies, revealing their frequency, characteristics, and connection to galaxy interactions and extended UV disks, using imaging and spectroscopic data.
Contribution
It introduces an automated method to identify outlying HII regions and demonstrates their prevalence and association with galaxy interactions and extended UV features.
Findings
Outlying HII regions are present in 8-11% of gas-rich galaxies.
Deep GALEX imaging effectively distinguishes outlying HII regions from background galaxies.
Most outlying HII regions are linked to galaxy interactions or extended UV disks.
Abstract
We present results from the first systematic search for outlying HII regions, as part of a sample of 96 emission-line point sources (referred to as ELdots - emission-line dots) derived from the NOAO Survey for Ionization in Neutral Gas Galaxies (SINGG). Our automated ELdot-finder searches SINGG narrow-band and continuum images for high equivalent width point sources outside the optical radius of the target galaxy (> 2 X r25 in the R-band). Follow-up longslit spectroscopy and deep GALEX images (exposure time > 1000 s) distinguish outlying HII regions from background galaxies whose strong emission lines ([OIII], Hbeta or [OII]) have been redshifted into the SINGG bandpass. We find that these deep GALEX images can serve as a substitute for spectroscopic follow-up because outlying HII regions separate cleanly from background galaxies in color-color space. We identify seven SINGG systems…
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