The distribution of atomic hydrogen in EAGLE galaxies: morphologies, profiles, and HI holes
Yannick M. Bahe, Robert A. Crain, Guinevere Kauffmann, Richard G., Bower, Joop Schaye, Michelle Furlong, Claudia Lagos, Matthieu Schaller, James, W. Trayford, Claudio Dalla Vecchia, and Tom Theuns

TL;DR
This study compares the distribution and properties of atomic hydrogen in simulated galaxies from EAGLE with observations, revealing good overall agreement but also highlighting issues like HI holes likely caused by feedback processes.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of HI distributions in EAGLE galaxies with observational data, including effects of feedback and molecular hydrogen modeling.
Findings
HI fractions match observations within 0.1 dex for certain galaxy masses
Most simulated HI-rich galaxies have vertically disturbed HI disks
Large HI holes are common in simulations, likely due to feedback
Abstract
We compare the mass and internal distribution of atomic hydrogen (HI) in 2200 present-day central galaxies with M_star > 10^10 M_Sun from the 100 Mpc EAGLE Reference simulation to observational data. Atomic hydrogen fractions are corrected for self-shielding using a fitting formula from radiative transfer simulations and for the presence of molecular hydrogen using an empirical or a theoretical prescription from the literature. The resulting neutral hydrogen fractions, M_(HI+H2)/M_star, agree with observations to better than 0.1 dex for galaxies with M_star between 10^10 and 10^11 M_Sun. Our fiducial, empirical H2 model based on gas pressure results in galactic HI mass fractions, M_HI/M_star, that agree with observations from the GASS survey to better than 0.3 dex, but the alternative theoretical H2 formula leads to a negative offset in M_HI/M_star of up to 0.5 dex. Visual inspection…
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