Predictions for ASKAP Neutral Hydrogen Surveys
Alan R. Duffy (1,2), Martin J. Meyer (1), Lister Staveley-Smith (1),, Maksym Bernyk (3), Darren J. Croton (3), Barbel S. Koribalski (4), Derek, Gerstmann (1), Stefan Westerlund (1) ((1) International Centre for Radio, Astronomy Research, The University of Western Australia

TL;DR
This paper predicts the capabilities of ASKAP's upcoming neutral hydrogen surveys, WALLABY and DINGO, using semi-analytic models to estimate galaxy detection, resolution, and scientific potential across cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions for ASKAP's HI survey yields, resolution, and scientific applications based on simulations, informing future galaxy formation studies.
Findings
WALLABY will detect over 600,000 galaxies, most of which will be resolved.
DINGO will trace HI evolution up to z=0.43, detecting about 100,000 galaxies.
Higher resolution with more antennas significantly reduces source confusion.
Abstract
The Australian Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) will revolutionise our knowledge of gas-rich galaxies in the Universe. Here we present predictions for two proposed extragalactic ASKAP neutral hydrogen (HI) emission-line surveys, based on semi-analytic models applied to cosmological N-body simulations. The ASKAP HI All-Sky Survey, known as WALLABY, is a shallow 3 Pi survey (z = 0 - 0.26) which will probe the mass and dynamics of over 600,000 galaxies. A much deeper small-area HI survey, called DINGO, aims to trace the evolution of HI from z = 0 - 0.43, a cosmological volume of 40 million Mpc^3, detecting potentially 100,000 galaxies. The high-sensitivity 30 antenna ASKAP core (diameter ~2 km) will provide an angular resolution of 30 arcsec (at z=0). Our simulations show that the majority of galaxies detected in WALLABY (87.5%) will be resolved. About 5000 galaxies will be well…
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