ALFALFA HI Data Stacking I. Does the Bulge Quench Ongoing Star Formation in Early-Type Galaxies?
Silvia Fabello, Barbara Catinella, Riccardo Giovanelli, Guinevere, Kauffmann, Martha P. Haynes, Timothy M. Heckman, David Schiminovich

TL;DR
This study uses HI stacking of ~5000 galaxies to investigate if bulges suppress star formation, finding that HI content is more strongly linked to colour and surface density than to galaxy morphology.
Contribution
It provides evidence that bulge presence does not significantly affect the HI gas fraction, challenging the morphological quenching hypothesis.
Findings
HI content correlates with NUV-r colour and surface density
Bulge-dominated galaxies have similar HI fractions as late-type galaxies on the red sequence
Results contradict the morphological quenching scenario
Abstract
We have carried out an HI stacking analysis of a volume-limited sample of ~5000 galaxies with imaging and spectroscopic data from GALEX and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which lie within the current footprint of the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) Survey. Our galaxies are selected to have stellar masses greater than 10^10 Msun and redshifts in the range 0.025<z<0.05. We extract a sub-sample of 1833 "early-type" galaxies with inclinations less than 70deg, with concentration indices C>2.6 and with light profiles that are well fit by a De Vaucouleurs model. We then stack HI line spectra extracted from the ALFALFA data cubes at the 3-D positions of the galaxies from these two samples in bins of stellar mass, stellar mass surface density, central velocity dispersion, and NUV-r colour. We use the stacked spectra to estimate the average HI gas fractions M_HI/M_* of the galaxies in each bin.…
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