The HI mass function as a probe of photoionisation feedback on low mass galaxy formation
Han-Seek Kim (1), J. Stuart. B. Wyithe (1,4), C. Power (2,4), Jaehong, Park (1), C. d. P. Lagos (2), C. M. Baugh (3) ((1) UMelb, (2) UWA, (3) ICC,, (4) CAASTRO)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how photoionisation feedback influences the low-mass end of the HI mass function in the local Universe, highlighting the importance of an evolving critical halo mass in galaxy formation models.
Contribution
It introduces a model with an evolving critical halo mass to explain the shape and abundance of low-mass HI galaxies, connecting feedback effects to observable properties.
Findings
The critical halo mass decreases with increasing redshift.
An evolving critical halo mass is necessary to match the low-mass HI galaxy data.
Predictions for clustering and HI-stellar mass relations for future surveys.
Abstract
We explore the galaxy formation physics governing the low mass end of the HI mass function in the local Universe. Specifically, we predict the effects on the HI mass function of varying i) the strength of photoionisation feedback and the redshift of the end of the epoch of reionization, ii) the cosmology, iii) the supernovae feedback prescription, and iv) the efficiency of star formation. We find that the shape of the low-mass end of the HI mass function is most affected by the critical halo mass below which galaxy formation is suppressed by photoionisation heating of the intergalactic medium. We model the redshift dependence of this critical dark matter halo mass by requiring a match to the low-mass end of the HI mass function. The best fitting critical dark matter halo mass decreases as redshift increases in this model, corresponding to a circular velocity of $\sim 50 \, {\rm km…
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