Discrete clouds of neutral gas between the galaxies M31 and M33
Spencer A. Wolfe, D. J. Pisano, Felix J. Lockman, Stacy S. McGaugh,, Edward J. Shaya

TL;DR
This study reveals that the gas between galaxies M31 and M33 exists as both clouds and diffuse material, likely serving as a transient fuel source for future star formation in these galaxies.
Contribution
It provides new radio observations showing the composition and properties of intergalactic gas clouds between M31 and M33, supporting their role as potential star formation fuel.
Findings
Approximately 50% of the gas is in clouds
Cloud velocities match those of M31 and M33
Cloud properties suggest they are transient condensations
Abstract
Spiral galaxies must acquire gas to maintain their observed level of star formation beyond the next few billion years (Leroy et al. 2008). A source of this material may be the gas that resides between galaxies, but our understanding of the state and distribution of this gas is incomplete (Shull et al. 2012). Radio observations (Braun & Thilker 2004) of the Local Group of galaxies have revealed hydrogen gas extending from the disk of the galaxy M31 at least halfway to M33. This feature has been interpreted to be the neutral component of a condensing intergalactic filament (Dav\'e et al. 2001) which would be able to fuel star formation in M31 and M33, but simulations suggest that such a feature could also result from an interaction between both galaxies within the past few billion years (Bekki 2008). Here we report radio observations showing that about 50 per cent percent of this gas is…
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