The north-south asymmetry of the ALFALFA HI velocity width function
Richard A. N. Brooks (1, 2, 3), Kyle A. Oman (2, 3), Carlos S., Frenk (2, 3) ((1) University College London, (2) Durham ICC, (3) Durham, University)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the north-south asymmetry in the ALFALFA HI velocity width function, identifying survey sensitivity and clustering biases as causes, and provides corrected measurements to better test cosmological models.
Contribution
It identifies key systematic biases affecting the ALFALFA HIWF measurements and offers corrected data for more accurate cosmological testing.
Findings
Survey sensitivity differences cause apparent asymmetry.
Clustering biases from local overdensities affect measurements.
Corrected HIWF measurements align better with theoretical predictions.
Abstract
The number density of extragalactic 21-cm radio sources as a function of their spectral line-widths -- the HI width function (HIWF) -- is a sensitive tracer of the dark matter halo mass function (HMF). The cold dark matter model predicts that the HMF should be identical everywhere provided it is sampled in sufficiently large volumes, implying that the same should be true of the HIWF. The ALFALFA 21-cm survey measured the HIWF in northern and southern Galactic fields and found a systematically higher number density in the north. At face value, this is in tension with theoretical predictions. We use the Sibelius-DARK N-body simulation and the semi-analytical galaxy formation model GALFORM to create a mock ALFALFA survey. We find that the offset in number density has two origins: the sensitivity of the survey is different in the two fields, which has not been correctly accounted…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
