The Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA Survey: The Galaxy Population Detected by ALFALFA
Shan Huang, Martha P. Haynes, Riccardo Giovanelli, Jarle Brinchmann

TL;DR
This study analyzes the relationship between stars and gas in over 9,400 galaxies using ALFALFA HI data combined with SDSS and GALEX photometry, revealing key scaling relations and a transition in star formation properties around a stellar mass of 10^9.5 solar masses.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of HI and stellar properties in a large galaxy sample, highlighting a transition in star formation behavior and linking gas content to galaxy evolution.
Findings
Most galaxies are in the blue cloud with high gas fractions.
A transition in star formation properties occurs below stellar mass ~10^9.5 M_sun.
HI-selected galaxies are less evolved with higher SFR at fixed mass.
Abstract
Making use of HI 21 cm line measurements from the ALFALFA survey (alpha.40) and photometry from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and GALEX, we investigate the global scaling relations and fundamental planes linking stars and gas for a sample of 9417 common galaxies: the alpha.40-SDSS-GALEX sample. In addition to their HI properties derived from the ALFALFA dataset, stellar masses (M_*) and star formation rates (SFRs) are derived from fitting the UV-optical spectral energy distributions. 96% of the alpha.40-SDSS-GALEX galaxies belong to the blue cloud, with the average gas fraction f_HI = M_HI/M_* ~ 1.5. A transition in SF properties is found whereby below M_* ~ 10^9.5 M_sun, the slope of the star forming sequence changes, the dispersion in the specific star formation rate (SSFR) distribution increases and the star formation efficiency (SFE) mildly increases with M_*. The evolutionary…
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