On the role of feedback in shaping the cosmic abundance and clustering of neutral atomic hydrogen in galaxies
Han-Seek Kim (1), C. Power (2,4), C. M. Baugh (3), J. S. B. Wyithe, (1,4), C. G. Lacey (3), C. D. P. Lagos (3), C. S. Frenk (3) ((1) UMelb,, (2) UWA, (3) ICC, (4) CAASTRO)

TL;DR
This study uses a semi-analytical galaxy formation model to analyze how different feedback mechanisms affect the distribution, abundance, and clustering of neutral atomic hydrogen in galaxies at redshift zero, highlighting the HI mass function's sensitivity to reionization effects.
Contribution
It demonstrates the distinct impacts of supernovae, AGN, and photo-ionization feedback on galaxy properties and clustering, emphasizing the HI mass function as a key probe for cosmological reionization effects.
Findings
Increasing SNe feedback decreases HI mass and luminosity functions.
AGN feedback mainly affects the most HI-rich galaxies.
Weaker SNe feedback enhances clustering of HI-poor galaxies.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of feedback - from supernovae (SNe), active galactic nuclei (AGN) and a photo-ionizing background at high redshifts - on the neutral atomic hydrogen (HI) mass function, the band luminosity function, and the spatial clustering of these galaxies at =0. We use a version of the semi-analytical galaxy formation model GALFORM that calculates self-consistently the amount of HI in a galaxy as a function of cosmic time and links its star formation rate to its mass of molecular hydrogen (H). We find that a systematic increase or decrease in the strength of SNe feedback leads to a systematic decrease or increase in the amplitudes of the luminosity and HI mass functions, but has little influence on their overall shapes. Varying the strength of AGN feedback influences only the numbers of the brightest or most HI massive galaxies, while the impact of…
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