Global Properties of Neutral Hydrogen in Compact Groups
Lisa May Walker, Kelsey E. Johnson, Sarah C. Gallagher, George C., Privon, Amanda A. Kepley, David G. Whelan, Tyler D. Desjardins, and Ann I., Zabludoff

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment of compact galaxy groups influences the gas content and star formation activity of member galaxies, revealing correlations and anomalies that shed light on galaxy evolution in dense settings.
Contribution
The paper introduces new GBT HI observations of 30 compact groups and a novel metric for group HI content, linking gas properties to star formation activity and galaxy interactions.
Findings
Quiescent galaxies are generally in HI-poor groups.
Star-forming galaxies are more common in HI-rich groups.
Identified galaxies with star formation activity inconsistent with their HI content.
Abstract
Compact groups of galaxies provide a unique environment to study the evolution of galaxies amid frequent gravitational encounters. These nearby groups have conditions similar to those in the earlier universe when galaxies were assembled and give us the opportunity to witness hierarchical formation in progress. To understand how the compact group environment affects galaxy evolution, we examine the gas and dust in these groups. We present new single-dish GBT neutral hydrogen (HI) observations of 30 compact groups and define a new way to quantify the group HI content as the HI-to-stellar mass ratio of the group as a whole. We compare the HI content with mid-IR indicators of star formation and optical [g-r] color to search for correlations between group gas content and star formation activity of individual group members. Quiescent galaxies tend to live in HI-poor groups, and galaxies with…
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