Drivers of HI Turbulence in Dwarf Galaxies
Adrienne M. Stilp, Julianne J. Dalcanton, Evan D. Skillman, Steven R., Warren, Juergen Ott, Baerbel Koribalski

TL;DR
This study investigates the drivers of HI turbulence in dwarf galaxies, finding that gravity correlates strongly with turbulence, star formation provides a threshold energy, but no single mechanism explains turbulence at low star formation rates.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of HI turbulence drivers in dwarf galaxies, highlighting the limitations of star formation alone and suggesting multiple mechanisms are involved.
Findings
HI velocity dispersion correlates with surface mass density.
Star formation supplies enough energy for turbulence above a certain threshold.
No single mechanism fully explains turbulence at low star formation rates.
Abstract
Neutral hydrogen (HI) velocity dispersions are believed to be set by turbulence in the interstellar medium (ISM). Although turbulence is widely believed to be driven by star formation (SF), recent studies have shown that this driving mechanism may not be dominant in regions of low SF rate surface density (SFRSD), such as found in dwarf galaxies or the outer regions of spirals. We have generated average HI line profiles in a number of nearby dwarfs and low-mass spirals by co-adding HI spectra in regions with either a common radius or SFRSD. We find that the spatially-resolved superprofiles are composed of a central narrow peak (5-15 km/s) with higher velocity wings to either side. With the assumption that the central peak reflects the turbulent velocity dispersion, we compare HI kinematics to local ISM properties, including surface mass densities and measures of SF. The HI velocity…
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