HI 21-centimetre emission from an ensemble of galaxies at an average redshift of one
Aditya Chowdhury, Nissim Kanekar, Jayaram Chengalur, Shiv Sethi, K.S., Dwarakanath

TL;DR
This study measures the average neutral hydrogen (HI) gas in galaxies at redshift 1 using 21cm emission stacking, revealing insights into galaxy evolution and the decline of star formation in the universe.
Contribution
First measurement of average HI mass in star-forming galaxies at z≈1 using 21cm emission stacking, linking gas content to star formation decline.
Findings
Average HI mass comparable to stellar mass at z≈1.
HI gas can fuel star formation for only 1-2 billion years without new gas infall.
Gas accretion at z<1 may be insufficient to sustain high star-formation rates.
Abstract
The baryonic processes in galaxy evolution include gas infall onto galaxies to form neutral atomic hydrogen (HI), the conversion of HI to the molecular state (H), and, finally, the conversion of H to stars. Understanding galaxy evolution thus requires understanding the evolution of both the stars, and the neutral atomic and molecular gas, the primary fuel for star-formation, in galaxies. For the stars, the cosmic star-formation rate density is known to peak in the redshift range , and to decline by an order of magnitude over the next billion years; the causes of this decline are not known. For the gas, the weakness of the hyperfine HI 21cm transition, the main tracer of the HI content of galaxies, has meant that it has not hitherto been possible to measure the atomic gas mass of galaxies at redshifts higher than ; this is a critical…
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.
