Identifying galaxy candidates in WSRT HI imaging of ultra-compact high velocity clouds
Elizabeth A. K. Adams, Tom A. Oosterloo, John M. Cannon, Riccardo, Giovanelli, and Martha P. Haynes

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution WSRT HI observations to identify potential galaxy candidates among ultra-compact high velocity clouds, revealing some as likely dark matter halos with specific properties.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that high column density UCHVCs with smooth HI morphology and ordered velocity motion are promising galaxy candidates, refining selection criteria for dark matter halo identification.
Findings
Two UCHVCs show ordered velocity motion consistent with rotation.
Identified three UCHVCs as potential galaxy candidates based on morphology and velocity.
Candidate galaxies have rotation velocities of 8-15 km/s and HI masses of 0.6-50 x 10^5 Msun.
Abstract
Ultra-compact high velocity clouds (UCHVCs) were identified in the ALFALFA HI survey as potential gas-bearing dark matter halos. Here we present higher resolution neutral hydrogen (HI) observations of twelve UCHVCS with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT). The UCHVCs were selected based on a combination of size, isolation, large recessional velocity and high column density as the best candidate dark matter halos. The WSRT data were tapered to image the UCHVCs at 210" (comparable to Arecibo) and 105" angular resolution. In a comparison of the single-dish to interferometer data, we find that the line flux recovered in the WSRT observations is comparable to that from the single-dish ALFALFA data. In addition, any structure seen in the ALFALFA data is reproduced in the WSRT maps at the same angular resolution. At 210'" resolution all the sources are generally compact with a…
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