Quantified HI Morphology IV: The Merger Fraction and Rate in WHISP
B. W. Holwerda (1,2), N. Pirzkal (3), W.J.G. de Blok (2), A. Bouchard, (4), S-L. Blyth (2), and K. J. van der Heyden (2), ((1) European Space, Agency, ESTEC, (2) Astrophysics, Cosmology, Gravity Centre (ACGC),, Astronomy Department, University of Cape Town

TL;DR
This study uses HI morphology parameters to identify galaxy mergers in the WHISP survey, finding a consistent merger rate with optical surveys and demonstrating HI morphology as an effective merger indicator.
Contribution
It introduces a simple HI morphological parametrization to detect galaxy mergers and compares its effectiveness with traditional close pair methods.
Findings
13% of galaxies show interaction based on HI morphology
7% show interaction based on close companions
Merger rates from HI morphology and close pairs are consistent
Abstract
The morphology of the atomic hydrogen (HI) disk of a spiral galaxy is the first component to be disturbed by a gravitational interaction such as a merger between two galaxies. We use a simple parametrisation of the morphology of HI column density maps of Westerbork HI Spiral Project (WHISP) to select those galaxies that are likely undergoing a significant interaction. Merging galaxies occupy a particular part of parameter space defined by Asymmetry (A), the relative contribution of the 20% brightest pixels to the second order moment of the column density map (M20) and the distribution of the second order moment over all the pixels (GM). Based on their HI morphology, we find that 13% of the WHISP galaxies are in an interaction (Concentration-M20) and only 7% based on close companions in the data-cube. This apparent discrepancy can be attributed to the difference in visibility time…
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