The clustering of ALFALFA galaxies: dependence on HI mass, relationship to optical samples & clues on host halo properties
Emmanouil Papastergis (1), Riccardo Giovanelli (1), Martha P. Haynes, (1), Aldo Rodr\'iguez-Puebla (2), Michael G. Jones (1) ((1) Cornell, University, (2) Universidad Nacional Aut\'onoma de M\'exico)

TL;DR
This study investigates the clustering behavior of HI-selected galaxies from the ALFALFA survey, comparing it with optical samples and exploring the role of halo properties, revealing that HI mass does not strongly correlate with halo mass and that halo spin influences gas content.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the clustering dependence on HI mass, compares HI-selected and optical galaxy clustering, and links halo spin to galaxy gas content.
Findings
Clustering of HI galaxies shows no strong dependence on HI mass.
HI-selected galaxies cluster more weakly than optically faint galaxies.
Halo spin parameter influences the gas content of galaxies.
Abstract
We use a sample of ~6000 galaxies detected by the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA (ALFALFA) 21cm survey, to measure the clustering properties of HI-selected galaxies. We find no convincing evidence for a dependence of clustering on the galactic atomic hydrogen (HI) mass, over the range M_HI ~ 10^{8.5} - 10^{10.5} M_sun. We show that previously reported results of weaker clustering for low-HI mass galaxies are probably due to finite-volume effects. In addition, we compare the clustering of ALFALFA galaxies with optically selected samples drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). We find that HI-selected galaxies cluster more weakly than even relatively optically faint galaxies, when no color selection is applied. Conversely, when SDSS galaxies are split based on their color, we find that the correlation function of blue optical galaxies is practically indistinguishable from that of…
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