H I content in Coma cluster substructure
J. Healy, S-L. Blyth, M.A.W. Verheijen, K.M. Hess, P. Serra, J.M. van, der Hulst, T.H. Jarrett, K. Yim, and G. I. G. Jozsa

TL;DR
This study investigates the neutral hydrogen content in the Coma galaxy cluster, revealing that galaxies in substructures are significantly more HI deficient, indicating rapid quenching processes influenced by the cluster environment.
Contribution
It introduces a new analysis of HI content in Coma substructures using HI stacking and Dressler-Shectman test, highlighting the impact of environment on galaxy evolution.
Findings
15 substructures identified within Coma
Galaxies in substructure are more HI deficient
Coma galaxies are more HI deficient than previously thought
Abstract
Galaxy clusters are some of largest structures in the universe. These very dense environments tend to be home to higher numbers of evolved galaxies that what is found in lower density environments. It is well known that dense environments can influence the evolution of galaxies through the removal of the neutral gas (HI) reservoirs which fuel star formation. It is unclear which environment has a stronger effect: the local environment (i.e. the substructure within the cluster), or the cluster itself. Using the new HI data from the Westerbork Coma Survey, we explore the average HI content of galaxies across the cluster comparing galaxies that reside in substructure to those that do not. We apply to the Dressler-Shectman test to our newly compiled redshift catalogue of the Coma cluster to search for substructure. With so few of the Coma galaxies directly detected in HI, we use the HI…
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.
