Cold gas properties of the Herschel Reference Survey. III. Molecular gas stripping in cluster galaxies
A. Boselli, L. Cortese, M. Boquien, S. Boissier, B. Catinella, G., Gavazzi, C. Lagos, A. Saintonge

TL;DR
This study investigates how the molecular and atomic gas content in spiral galaxies is affected by the cluster environment, revealing that H2 is less efficiently stripped than HI and that gas removal influences star formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a new H2-deficiency parameter based on the M(H2) vs. M* relation and compares gas stripping efficiencies of HI and H2 in cluster galaxies.
Findings
H2-deficiency correlates weakly with HI-deficiency.
H2 discs are less truncated than HI discs in cluster galaxies.
Ram pressure stripping is the main driver of gas removal, not starvation.
Abstract
The HRS is a complete volume-limited sample of nearby objects including Virgo cluster and isolated objects. Using a recent compilation of HI and CO data we study the effects of the cluster on the molecular gas content of spiral galaxies. We first identify M* as the scaling variable that traces the total H2 mass of galaxies better. We show that, on average, HI-deficient galaxies are significantly offset from the M(H2) vs. M* relation for HI-normal galaxies. We use the M(H2) vs. M* scaling relation to define the H2-deficiency parameter. This parameter shows a weak and scattered relation with the HI-def, here taken as a proxy for galaxy interactions with the cluster environment. We also show that, as for the HI, the extent of the H2 disc decreases with increasing HI-deficiency. These results show that cluster galaxies have, on average, a lower H2 content than similar objects in the field.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
