Connecting Transitions in Galaxy Properties to Refueling
Sheila J. Kannappan, David V. Stark, Kathleen D. Eckert, Amanda J., Moffett, Lisa H. Wei, D. J. Pisano, Andrew J. Baker, Stuart N. Vogel, Daniel, G. Fabricant, Seppo Laine, Mark A. Norris, Shardha Jogee, Natasha Lepore,, Loren E. Hough, Jennifer Weinberg-Wolf

TL;DR
This paper links galaxy structural and gas content transitions to refueling processes, revealing how gas accretion and internal processing drive galaxy evolution across different mass regimes and environments.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of galaxy gas and star formation relations, highlighting mass-dependent refueling regimes and their role in galaxy evolution.
Findings
Gas-rich, low-mass galaxies dominate below 125 km/s.
Gas-starved galaxies are prevalent above 200 km/s.
Gas-to-stellar mass ratio correlates with recent star formation history.
Abstract
We relate transitions in galaxy structure and gas content to refueling, here defined to include both the external gas accretion and the internal gas processing needed to renew reservoirs for star formation. We analyze two z=0 data sets: a high-quality ~200-galaxy sample (the Nearby Field Galaxy Survey, data release herein) and a volume-limited ~3000-galaxy sample with reprocessed archival data. Both reach down to baryonic masses ~10^9Msun and span void-to-cluster environments. Two mass-dependent transitions are evident: (i) below the "gas-richness threshold" scale (V~125km/s), gas-dominated quasi-bulgeless Sd--Im galaxies become numerically dominant, while (ii) above the "bimodality" scale (V~200km/s), gas-starved E/S0s become the norm. Notwithstanding these transitions, galaxy mass (or V as its proxy) is a poor predictor of gas-to-stellar mass ratio M_gas/M_*. Instead, M_gas/M_*…
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