Star Formation in Partially Gas-Depleted Spiral Galaxies
James A. Rose, Paul Robertson, Jesse Miner, Lorenza Levy

TL;DR
This study investigates how star formation rates in spiral galaxies are affected by HI gas deficiency, revealing that gas-poor galaxies have lower overall star formation but higher central activity and truncated H-alpha disks.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence linking HI deficiency to reduced global star formation and increased central star formation in spiral galaxies within different environments.
Findings
HI deficiency correlates with lower global SFR per unit stellar mass.
Gas-poor galaxies often have elevated central SFRs relative to their global rates.
HI-poor galaxies exhibit truncated H-alpha disks.
Abstract
Broadband B and R and H-alpha images have been obtained with the 4.1-m SOAR telescope atop Cerro Pachon, Chile for 29 spiral galaxies in the Pegasus I galaxy cluster and for 18 spirals in non-cluster environments. Pegasus I is a spiral-rich cluster with a low density intracluster medium and a low galaxy velocity dispersion. When combined with neutral hydrogen (HI) data obtained with the Arecibo 305-m radiotelescope, acquired by Levy et al. (2007) and by Springob et al. (2005a), we study the star formation rates in disk galaxies as a function of their HI deficiency. To quantify HI deficiency, we use the usual logarithmic deficiency parameter, DEF. The specific star formation rate (SSFR) is quantified by the logarithmic flux ratio of H-alpha flux to R band flux, and thus roughly characterizes the logarithmic SFR per unit stellar mass. We find a clear correlation between the global SFR per…
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