Constraining the HI-Halo Mass Relation From Galaxy Clustering
Hong Guo, Cheng Li, Zheng Zheng, H.J. Mo, Y.P. Jing, Ying Zu, S.H., Lim, Haojie Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy clustering depends on atomic hydrogen mass, revealing a significant increase in clustering strength for HI masses above 10^9 solar masses and proposing an extended halo model including halo formation time.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of HI mass dependence on galaxy clustering and extends the halo model to include formation time, improving interpretation of HI-selected galaxy distributions.
Findings
Clustering amplitude increases with HI mass above 10^9 M_sun.
Simple halo model struggles to explain HI-selected clustering.
Including halo formation time improves model fit.
Abstract
We study the dependence of galaxy clustering on atomic gas mass using a sample of 16,000 galaxies with redshift in the range of and HI mass of , drawn from the 70% complete sample of the Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA survey. We construct subsamples of galaxies with above different thresholds, and make volume-limited clustering measurements in terms of three statistics: the projected two-point correlation function, the projected cross-correlation function with respect to a reference sample selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and the redshift-space monopole moment. In contrast to previous studies, which found no/weak HI-mass dependence, we find both the clustering amplitude on scales above a few Mpc and the bias factors to increase significantly with increasing HI mass for subsamples with HI mass thresholds above…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
