Drivers of asymmetry in synthetic H I emission-line profiles of galaxies in the EAGLE simulation
Aditya Manuwal (1), Aaron D. Ludlow (1), Adam R. H. Stevens (1), Ruby, J. Wright (1), Aaron S. G. Robotham (1) ((1) International Centre for, Radio Astronomy Research, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA,, Australia)

TL;DR
This study investigates the causes of asymmetry in the H I emission-line profiles of galaxies using the EAGLE simulation, linking asymmetry to galaxy dynamics, gas content, and environment.
Contribution
It identifies key factors influencing H I line asymmetry, including galaxy support mechanisms, feedback processes, and environmental effects, providing new insights into galaxy gas dynamics.
Findings
Symmetric H I lines correlate with gas-rich, rotationally supported disks.
Asymmetry is linked to unrelaxed dark matter haloes and environmental interactions.
Feedback and environmental processes significantly influence line asymmetry.
Abstract
We study the shapes of spatially integrated H I emission-line profiles of galaxies in the EAGLE simulation using three separate measures of the profile's asymmetry. We show that the subset of EAGLE galaxies whose gas fractions and stellar masses are consistent with those in the xGASS survey also have similar H I line asymmetries. Central galaxies with symmetric H I line profiles typically correspond to rotationally supported H I and stellar disks, but those with asymmetric line profiles may or may not correspond to dispersion-dominated systems. Galaxies with symmetric H I emission lines are, on average, more gas rich than those with asymmetric lines, and also exhibit systematic differences in their specific star formation rates, suggesting that turbulence generated by stellar or AGN feedback may be one factor contributing to H I line asymmetry. The line asymmetry also correlates…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
