The DiskMass Survey. X. Radio synthesis imaging of spiral galaxies
Thomas P. K. Martinsson, Marc A. W. Verheijen, Matthew A. Bershady,, Kyle B. Westfall, David R. Andersen, Rob A. Swaters

TL;DR
This study provides detailed radio synthesis imaging of 28 spiral galaxies, revealing properties of their HI disks, correlations with star formation, and insights into their gas and stellar dynamics, useful for understanding galaxy structure.
Contribution
First comprehensive radio imaging analysis of a large spiral galaxy sample, linking HI properties with star formation and stellar dynamics.
Findings
HI disks extend beyond stellar disks with average ratio 1.35
Strong correlation between HI mass and HI diameter
Radial HI surface density profiles are well described by a Gaussian
Abstract
We present results from 21 cm radio synthesis imaging of 28 spiral galaxies from the DiskMass Survey obtained with the VLA, WSRT, and GMRT facilities. We detail the observations and data reduction procedures and present a brief analysis of the radio data. We construct 21 cm continuum images, global HI emission-line profiles, column-density maps, velocity fields, and position-velocity diagrams. From these we determine star formation rates (SFRs), HI line widths, total HI masses, rotation curves, and azimuthally-averaged radial HI column-density profiles. All galaxies have an HI disk that extends beyond the readily observable stellar disk, with an average ratio and scatter of R_{HI}/R_{25}=1.35+/-0.22, and a majority of the galaxies appear to have a warped HI disk. A tight correlation exists between total HI mass and HI diameter, with the largest disks having a slightly lower average…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
