Smooth HI Low Column Density Outskirts In Nearby Galaxies
Roger Ianjamasimanana, Fabian Walter, W.J.G. de Blok, George H. Heald,, Elias Brinks

TL;DR
This study investigates the outer regions of nearby galaxies' HI gas, finding no evidence of the predicted ionization break at low column densities, using a novel stacking method to enhance sensitivity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a stacking technique to detect faint HI emission in galaxy outskirts, challenging the expected ionization break in radial profiles.
Findings
No evidence of a sharp HI profile break in most galaxies
Stacking method improves sensitivity to faint outer-disk HI emission
Most galaxies show smooth HI radial profiles without ionization signatures
Abstract
The low column density gas at the outskirts of galaxies as traced by the 21 cm hydrogen line emission (HI) represents the interface between galaxies and the intergalactic medium, i.e., where galaxies are believed to get their supply of gas to fuel future episodes of star formation. Photoionization models predict a break in the radial profiles of HI at a column density of 5x10E+19 cm^-2 due to the lack of self-shielding against extragalactic ionizing photons. To investigate the prevalence of such breaks in galactic disks and to characterize what determines the potential "edge" of the HI disks, we study the azimuthally-averaged HI column density profiles of 17 nearby galaxies from The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey (THINGS) and supplemented in two cases with published Hydrogen Accretion in LOcal GAlaxieS (HALOGAS) data. To detect potential faint HI emission that would otherwise be undetected…
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.
