Disc galaxy resolved in HI absorption against the radio lobe of 3C 433: Case study for future surveys
Suma Murthy, Raffaella Morganti, Bjorn Emonts, Montserrat, Villar-Mart\'in, Tom Oosterloo, Reynier Peletier

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the effectiveness of using resolved HI absorption against radio lobes to investigate the neutral gas content of galaxies at higher redshifts, revealing low-mass systems that emission surveys might miss.
Contribution
It provides a rare case study of resolved HI absorption in a galaxy at z=0.101, highlighting its potential for future surveys with SKA pathfinders.
Findings
Resolved HI absorption shows regular kinematics in the galaxy.
The galaxy has a low HI mass and star-formation rate, below the main sequence.
Alignments suggest shock ionization by radio source across tens of kpc.
Abstract
The neutral atomic gas content of galaxies is usually studied in the HI 21cm emission line of hydrogen. However, at higher redshifts, we need very deep integrations to detect HI emission. The HI absorption does not suffer from this dependence on distance as long as there is a bright enough background radio source. However, resolved HI absorption studies of galaxies are rare. We report one such rare study of resolved HI absorption against the radio galaxy 3C 433 at with the VLA. The resolved kinematics of the absorber, located against the southern lobe of the 3C 433, shows that it has regular kinematics with an HI mass for T 100K. Our deep optical continuum and H observations from the Gran Telescopio CANARIAS (GTC) show that the absorber is a faint disc galaxy in the same environment as 3C 433 with a stellar mass $\sim…
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