The Fueling Diagram: Linking Galaxy Molecular-to-Atomic Gas Ratios to Interactions and Accretion
David V. Stark, Sheila J. Kannappan, Lisa H. Wei, Andrew J. Baker,, Adam K. Leroy, Kathleen D. Eckert, Stuart N. Vogel

TL;DR
This study introduces the 'fueling diagram,' linking galaxy gas ratios to interactions and accretion, revealing evolutionary sequences and the impact of external factors on galaxy evolution across diverse types.
Contribution
It presents a new diagrammatic framework connecting gas ratios to galaxy interactions and accretion, highlighting evolutionary pathways in galaxy gas content and star formation.
Findings
Spiral galaxies show a positive correlation between H2/HI and blue-centeredness.
E/S0 galaxies exhibit complex behaviors, including quenched states and a loop in the diagram.
Evidence suggests ongoing gas accretion and evolutionary sequences in galaxy gas properties.
Abstract
To assess how external factors such as local interactions and fresh gas accretion influence the global ISM of galaxies, we analyze the relationship between recent enhancements of central star formation and total molecular-to-atomic (H2/HI) gas ratios, using a broad sample of field galaxies spanning early-to-late type morphologies, stellar masses of 10^(7.2-11.2) Msun, and diverse stages of evolution. We find that galaxies occupy several loci in a "fueling diagram" that plots H2/HI vs. mass-corrected blue-centeredness, a metric tracing the degree to which galaxies have bluer centers than the average galaxy at their stellar mass. Spiral galaxies show a positive correlation between H2/HI and mass-corrected blue-centeredness. When combined with previous results linking mass-corrected blue-centeredness to external perturbations, this correlation suggests a link between local galaxy…
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