Active Disk Building in a local HI-Massive LIRG: The Synergy between Gas, Dust, and Star Formation
M.E. Cluver, T.H. Jarrett, R.C. Kraan-Korteweg, B.S. Koribalski, P.N., Appleton, J. Melbourne, B. Emonts, P.A. Woudt

TL;DR
HIZOA J0836-43 is a nearby, HI-massive LIRG with active star formation, high gas fraction, and PAH emission, providing insights into galaxy disk building processes similar to those at redshift z~1.
Contribution
This study presents detailed multi-wavelength observations of HIZOA J0836-43, revealing its unique properties and evolutionary state, bridging local universe and high-redshift galaxy characteristics.
Findings
High HI mass and gas fraction comparable to z~1.5 galaxies.
Strong PAH emission indicating PDR-dominated regions.
Star formation efficiency similar to local spirals and high-redshift disks.
Abstract
HIZOA J0836-43 is the most HI-massive (M_HI = 7.5x10^10 Msun) galaxy detected in the HIPASS volume and lies optically hidden behind the Milky Way. Markedly different from other extreme HI disks in the local universe, it is a luminous infrared galaxy (LIRG) with an actively star forming disk (>50 kpc), central to its ~ 130 kpc gas disk, with a total star formation rate (SFR) of ~20.5 Msun yr^{-1}. Spitzer spectroscopy reveals an unusual combination of powerful polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission coupled to a relatively weak warm dust continuum, suggesting photodissociation region (PDR)-dominated emission. Compared to a typical LIRG with similar total infrared luminosity (L_TIR=10^11 Lsun), the PAHs in HIZOA J0836-43 are more than twice as strong, whereas the warm dust continuum (lambda > 20micron) is best fit by a star forming galaxy with L_TIR=10^10 Lsun. Mopra CO…
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