The GALEX Arecibo SDSS Survey VII: The Bivariate Neutral Hydrogen-Stellar Mass Function for Massive Galaxies
Jenna J. Lemonias (Columbia), David Schiminovich, Barbara Catinella,, Timothy M. Heckman, Sean M. Moran

TL;DR
This paper characterizes the bivariate neutral hydrogen-stellar mass function for massive galaxies, revealing how HI content varies with stellar mass and star formation rate, and providing models to constrain galaxy evolution simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed bivariate HI-stellar mass function for massive galaxies and models its dependence on stellar mass and star formation rate.
Findings
Massive galaxies contribute 41% of the local HI density.
The HISMF is best modeled by a Schechter function extending down to 1% HI gas fraction.
Weak variation of the characteristic HI mass with stellar mass and SFR.
Abstract
We present the bivariate neutral atomic hydrogen (HI)---stellar mass function (HISMF) (phi(M_HI, M_*)) for massive (log M_*/M_sun > 10) galaxies derived from a sample of 480 local (0.025 < z < 0.050) galaxies observed in HI at Arecibo as part of the GALEX Arecibo SDSS Survey (GASS). We fit six different models to the HISMF and find that a Schechter function that extends down to a 1% HI gas fraction, with an additional fractional contribution below that limit, is the best parametrization of the HISMF. We calculate Omega_{HI, M_* >10^10} and find that massive galaxies contribute 41% of the HI density in the local universe. In addition to the binned HISMF we derive a continuous bivariate fit, which reveals that the Schechter parameters only vary weakly with stellar mass: M_HI^*, the characteristic HI mass, scales as M_*^0.39, alpha, the slope of the HISMF at moderate HI masses, scales as…
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