The Arecibo L-band Feed Array Zone of Avoidance Survey I: Precursor Observations through the Inner and Outer Galaxy
P.A. Henning, C.M. Springob, R.F. Minchin, E. Momjian, B. Catinella,, T. McIntyre, F. Day, E. Muller, B. Koribalski, J.L. Rosenberg, S. Schneider,, L. Staveley-Smith, and W. van Driel

TL;DR
This paper reports precursor observations of a low-Galactic latitude HI galaxy survey using Arecibo ALFA, revealing new galaxies behind the Milky Way and mapping large-scale structures in the Zone of Avoidance.
Contribution
It presents the initial results and catalog from precursor observations of the ALFA ZOA survey, demonstrating its capability to detect hidden galaxies and map large-scale structures.
Findings
Detected 72 HI galaxies in precursor regions
Identified galaxy overdensity near l=183° and 5000-6000 km/s
Good agreement with previous HI measurements
Abstract
The Arecibo L-band Feed Array (ALFA) is being used to conduct a low-Galactic latitude survey, to map the distribution of galaxies and large-scale structures behind the Milky Way through detection of galaxies' neutral hydrogen (HI) 21-cm emission. This Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) survey finds new HI galaxies which lie hidden behind the Milky Way, and also provides redshifts for partially-obscured galaxies known at other wavelengths. Before the commencement of the full survey, two low-latitude precursor regions were observed, totalling 138 square degrees, with 72 HI galaxies detected. Detections through the inner Galaxy generally have no cataloged counterparts in any other waveband, due to the heavy extinction and stellar confusion. Detections through the outer Galaxy are more likely to have 2MASS counterparts. We present the results of these precursor observations, including a catalog of the…
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