Prevalence of neutral gas in centres of merging galaxies
Rajeshwari Dutta, Raghunathan Srianand, Neeraj Gupta

TL;DR
This study reveals a high prevalence of neutral hydrogen gas in the centers of merging galaxies with strong radio sources, showing that mergers significantly increase HI absorption compared to isolated galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic measurement of HI 21-cm absorption in low-redshift galaxy mergers, demonstrating a higher detection rate and stronger absorption than in non-merging systems.
Findings
83% detection rate of HI absorption in mergers
Mergers have six times stronger HI absorption on average
Higher fraction of redshifted absorption components in mergers
Abstract
We present Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope and Very Large Array observations of HI 21-cm absorption in ten z<=0.2 galaxy mergers that host strong radio sources. Seven of these mergers show strong absorption [with N(HI) ~10^{21-22} cm^{-2}, for spin temperature of 100 K and unit covering factor], leading to a total detection rate of 83 +/- 17% in low-z radio-loud galaxy mergers. This is ~3-4 times higher than that found for intrinsic HI 21-cm absorption in low-z radio sources in general. The fraction of intrinsic absorbers that are associated with mergers increases with increasing N(HI) threshold, i.e. ~40% and 100% of the absorbers with N(HI) >10^{21} cm^{-2} and >10^{22} cm^{-2} arise from mergers, respectively. The distribution of N(HI) among the mergers is significantly different from that found in isolated systems, with mergers giving rise to six times stronger absorption on…
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