Quantified HI Morphology V: HI Disks in the Virgo Cluster
B. W. Holwerda (1,2), N. Pirzkal (3), W.J.G. de Blok (2), and W. van, Driel (4), ((1) European Space Agency, ESTEC, (2) Astrophysics, Cosmology and, Gravity Centre (ACGC), Astronomy Department, University of Cape Town, (3), Space Telescope Science Institute, (4) GEPI

TL;DR
This study quantifies the morphology of atomic hydrogen disks in Virgo cluster galaxies, revealing how ram-pressure and tidal interactions influence their structure using low-resolution HI data.
Contribution
It applies and validates morphological parameters to identify environmental effects on HI disks in a dense galaxy cluster environment.
Findings
Tidal tails are identifiable with Gini-M20 criteria in HI data.
Ram-pressure effects can mimic tidal interaction signatures in HI morphology.
Certain morphological parameters remain effective despite low data resolution.
Abstract
We explore the quantified morphology of atomic hydrogen (HI) disks in the Virgo cluster. These galaxies display a wealth of phenomena in their Hi morphology, e.g., tails, truncation and warps. These morphological disturbances are related to the ram-pressure stripping and tidal interaction that galaxies undergo in this dense cluster environment. To quantify the morphological transformation of the HI disks, we compute the morphological parameters of CAS, Gini, and M20 and our own GM for 51 galaxies in 48 HI column density maps from the VIVA project. Some morphological phenomena can be identified in this space of relatively low resolution HI data. Truncation of the HI disk can be cleanly identified via the Concentration parameter (C<1) and Concentration can also be used to identify HI deficient disks (1<C<5). Tidal interaction is typically identified using combinations of these…
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