The environmental dependence of HI in galaxies in the EAGLE simulations
Antonino Marasco, Robert A. Crain, Joop Schaye, Yannick M. Bah\'e,, Thijs van der Hulst, Tom Theuns, Richard G. Bower

TL;DR
This study uses the EAGLE simulations to analyze how the environment influences the HI content in galaxies, revealing the dominant processes and their timescales, and comparing simulation results with observations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of environmental effects on HI in galaxies using EAGLE, highlighting the dominant mechanisms and their impact on galaxy evolution.
Findings
EAGLE reproduces observed HI-environment trends well.
Satellite encounters are the main cause of HI removal, acting within 0.5 Gyr.
Ram pressure stripping mainly disturbs HI morphology at z=0.
Abstract
We use the EAGLE suite of cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to study how the HI content of present-day galaxies depends on their environment. We show that EAGLE reproduces observed HI mass-environment trends very well, while semi-analytic models typically overpredict the average HI masses in dense environments. The environmental processes act primarily as an on/off switch for the HI content of satellites with stellar mass Mstar>10^9 Msun. At a fixed Mstar, the fraction of HI-depleted satellites increases with increasing host halo mass M200 in response to stronger environmental effects, while at a fixed M200 it decreases with increasing satellite Mstar as the gas is confined by deeper gravitational potentials. HI-depleted satellites reside mostly, but not exclusively, within the virial radius r200 of their host halo. We investigate the origin of these trends by focussing on three…
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